Tag: Burundi

  • Burundi becomes first country to quit ICC

    Burundi becomes first country to quit ICC

    Burundi has become the first country to pull out of the International Criminal Court ( ICC ), a spokesman for the court in the Hague told dpa on Friday.

    The country had launched the process of leaving the court 2016, with the government saying the ICC was biased against African nations.

    Gambia and South Africa had announced their withdrawal in 2016, but changed their minds, leaving Burundi as the only country to officially leave.

    There are now 123 member states.

    Inspite of the withdrawal, the court will continue a preliminary investigation into possible war crimes in Burundi.

    The probe began in April 2016 and was “independent, impartial and objective,” the court spokesman added.

    Amnesty International’s Head of International Justice Matt Cannock said: “the Burundian government has made a cynical attempt to evade justice by taking the unprecedented step of withdrawing from the ICC.

    “Perpetrators, including members of the security forces, cannot so easily shirk their alleged responsibility for crimes under international law committed since 2015”.

    NAN

  • Unmarried couples in trouble in Burundi

    ALL unmarried couples in Burundi have up to the end of the year to legalize their relationships as government moves to ‘reform moral.’

    The action comes under President Pierre Nkurunziza’s campaign ‘to moralize society’.

    Interior ministry spokesman Terence Ntahiraja said the country was facing a population explosion which he blamed on ‘illegal marriages’, polygamy, bigamy and ‘hundreds of school girls getting pregnant’.

    He said church and state-sanctioned weddings were the solution and were a patriotic duty.

    Nkurunziza said Burundians should show their love for each other  and their country  by getting married.

    The government has since been pressuring unwed couples across the country to tie the knot.

    The governor of the south eastern province of Rutana has ordered that “persons living in common-law unions” should be put on a special list by June 22, while the governor of the north western Bubanza province has demanded unspecified “sanctions” against aisle-dodgers.

    Pierre, a 27-year-old farmer living with his partner in Ngozi, in the north, said local officials had threatened him with a 50,000 Burundian franc ($25/22 euro) fine and said any child born out of wedlock would not be eligible for free education and medical costs.

    Pierre said he had not married because he could not afford the bride price demanded by his girlfriend’s family.

    “She told me she was pregnant. As I am poor, we decided to come together to raise our child,” he said. “We thought we would legalise our union as soon as we could afford it.”

    That was five years ago and the couple is now onto their third child.

    To enact the president’s orders, officials have begun organizing mass weddings, something one civil society activist opposed as “a violation of human rights because the state has no right to attack two adults who have decided to live together without being married.”

    The activist said the forced marriages were part of a “religious crusade” led by Nkurunziza and his wife, both fervent, born-again evangelical Christians.

    Spokesman Ntahiraja dismissed such arguments saying the government’s campaign was within the law.

    “We want Burundians to understand that everyone is responsible for his life, we want order in this country,” he said.

    “All this is done within the framework of the patriotic training programme,” he added, referring to an initiative launched by Nkurunziza in August 2013 to reinforce “positive traditional values.”

  • 2017 Okpekpe Race: Olamide hopes for better outing

    Oluwaseun Olamide, who came second in the Nigerian category at the 4th Okpekpe International 10km Road Race, says she will better her performance to win the female category prize in the competition.

    Olamide told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Lagos that her target was to be among the first eight athletes in the international category.

    “My coming to Okpekpe this year is to be among the first eight in the international category. I also have the objective of upping my performance in other events I will attend this year.

    “I was among the first 10 in the international category last year and second Nigerian; so, I intend to improve on that record this time,’’ she said.

    Olamide is a gold medalist at the 2016 Ibadan/Splash FM Integrity marathon, and also, a gold medalist in the Nigerian category, 2016 Access Bank Lagos City Marathon.

    The only International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) approved Road Race in Africa is scheduled for May 13 in Edo.

    Athletes for the event are being expected from Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Uganda, Eritrea, Bahrain, Germany, Turkey, Morocco, Burundi and host, Nigeria.

    NAN reports that technological innovations such as mobile application, line-tracking and transponders have been introduced into this year’s competition.

     

  • African Union: FG intensifies Nigeria’s campaign

    African Union: FG intensifies Nigeria’s campaign

    The Federal Government says it is intensifying campaign for Ms Fatima Mohammed, the Nigeria/ECOWAS’ candidate for African Union (AU) Commissioner for Peace and Security.

    Amb. Enikanolaye, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, stated this in a statement made available to Newsmen on Thursday in Abuja.

    Enikanolaye said that Foreign Affairs Minister, Geoffrey Onyeama, the special envoy appointed by President Muhammadu Buhari was leading Nigeria’s delegation in the campaign to African countries.

    He said that the delegation, which was in Ethiopia on Monday, was received by the Ethiopian Foreign Minister, Dr Workneh Gebeyehu.

    Gebeyehu, he said, promised to convey President Buhari’s request to his Prime Minister and was optimistic of a favourable response.

    He said the delegation was also received by the President of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza in Bujumbura on Wednesday.

    Nkurunziza, according to him, indicated that Burundi also has a candidate for the same position, but expressed his readiness to support Nigeria’s candidate if the election goes into the second round.

    The president also expressed his admiration for Nigeria and President Buhari’s constructive role in peace, security and development of the African continent.

    Enikanolaye said Onyeama was currently on his way to Angola where he is scheduled to meet with the Angolan President on the issue.

  • Burundi’s environment minister assassinated

    Burundi’s environment minister assassinated

    An unknown gunman has killed environment minister Emmanuel Niyonkuru in the conflict-ridden East African nation of Burundi, a police spokesman said on Sunday.

    The minister was shot dead with a pistol in the early hours of Sunday in the streets of the Rohero neighbourhood in the capital, Bujumbura, police spokesman Pierre Nkurikiye said on Twitter.

    Police arrested a woman over her alleged involvement in the assassination, the spokesman added.

    Burundi has been suffering from ongoing political violence since President Pierre Nkurunziza won a third term in office in July 2015 elections, despite the constitutional two-term limit.

    Hundreds of people have been killed by police and armed opposition groups in the violence.

  • From Burundi to Gambia through DR Congo!

    Here we go again! Africans just have a way of muddying the waters. When you are thinking that Africa may finally be nearing getting used to democratic governance, even in its most elementary and rickety form, it springs new surprises that promptly and rudely snap you out of such day-dreaming. Two diametrically opposed occurrences in two English-speaking West African countries (Ghana and Gambia) just a few days apart brought about this thought. Presidential elections were held in both countries just a few days apart and the results were exactly the same, i.e., unambiguous electoral shellacking for both incumbent presidents by the people. While Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama, who has just served only one term of four years out of two terms allowed by the constitution, willingly accepted the popular verdict, President Yahya Jammeh, his counterpart in Gambia who has ruled for 22 years, initially accepted the electoral verdict and congratulated the winner, Adama Barrow of the opposition party, only to make a complete and inexplicable about turn a few days later and to reject the result of the election, implying he intends to hang on to power illegitimately and against the wish of the people. Yahya Jammeh has thus carelessly tossed a spanner into the wheel of progress, and democracy is coming under a serious threat in that tiny nation.

    Yes, there is no denying the obvious fact that democracy is in recession across the globe. A number of recent studies by established scholars of democracy have indicated that democracy and its appurtenances, such as freedom and human rights, are being eroded, bending democracy into a crooked form almost beyond recognition. Many leaders who though had gained power through democratic means had been known to systematically and incrementally stifle democratic rule. While major powers like Russia and China have never been democracies even by the remotest of definitions, recent developments in countries like Turkey, Philippines, and now the United States of America with the election of that narcissistic demagogue Donald Trump as president, are confirming or lending credence to the conclusion by renowned scholars like Larry Diamond on the inexorable decline of democracy across the globe.

    Africa is evidently the poster boy of authoritarian rule. Since Africa came on the global scene with a plethora of newly independent states in the 1960s, most of the countries have since been ruled by an array of pretentious democrats, ruthless autocrats, psychopathic tyrants, sanguinary despots, sadistic presidents-for-life, and an assortment of cold-blooded military dictators, such that democracy is actually more of an exception on the continent than the rule. The proverbial ‘third wave’ of democratization has made little, mostly cosmetic, impact in Africa, as these Stone Age despots cynically manipulate democratic processes and symbols to consolidate autocratic rule. Robert Mugabe has ruled hapless Zimbabwe since 1980 and has just only a few days back manipulated his ruling party to endorse him at 92 years of age as its presidential candidate in the 2018 general elections. Jose Eduardo dos Santos, Paul Biya, Yoweri Museveni, Paul Kagame, to name a few, have kept their respective countries under tight-fisted rule for more than two decades each and have continued to manipulate democratic processes to entrench extreme personalist rule. The predictable end result of long personalist rule in the African experience is to bring the hapless country to ruin. The carcass of the so-called Democratic Republic Congo after Mobutu’s ruinous 32-year dictatorship is there for all to see!

    Today, intra-state violence rages on in Burundi where the president, Pierre Nkurunziza, has repudiated the constitutional term limit and rigged himself into office against the wishes of the people; DR Congo, perpetually embroiled in political turmoil since its independence in 1960, is about to combust all over again by President Joseph Kabila’s blunt refusal to conduct elections and leave power at the expiration of his tenure. The opposition coalition is gearing up for a fight, and no one can predict exactly how it will all pan out. As if that is not enough to unnerve Africans, Gambia’s pocket-size tyrant who initially accepted the results of the presidential election has made a dangerous about-face, repudiating the elections. He has also snubbed an ECOWAS attempt to persuade him to respect the will of the people by handing over power. Gambia is about to have its own baptism of fire, as Jammeh sticks to his guns and as the winning party is insisting on taking power in January. Jammeh has deliberately created what is known as a ‘Mexican stand-off’, a situation an online dictionary defines as “a stalemate or impasse; a confrontation that neither side can win.”

    Jammeh is now the bull in Gambia’s china shop, and unless a suitable deal is worked out quickly to ease out of power, the tiny country of less than two million people risks going the way of DR Congo. Africa has regrettably walked this destructive path too many times before, with extremely devastating consequences, a path that Professor Adebayo Williams famously calls “the road to Kigali”. Unfortunately again, it does not yet seem that African rulers have learnt any useful lessons from these destructive experiences. It was not long ago that the once peaceful West African country of Cote d’Ivoire also exploded in an orgy of massive post-election violence and bloodletting on a scale that beggared belief, simply because the incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo, like Yahya Jammeh now, refused to give up power after a credible election that he lost. Jammeh should be told of the two fates that await him should he continue with his obduracy: leave in a casket, like Muammar Gaddafi, or be hauled before the International Criminal Court in The Hague to face trial like Laurent Gbagbo!

    ECOWAS and African Union leaders definitely have their work cut out for them. Both organizations of which Gambia is a member-state must insist forcefully and unequivocally on the non-negotiability of the sanctity of the peoples’ choice of their own leaders, and it is time Africans threw down the gauntlet that if democracy would take root and deepen, it must begin with the respect for the sanctity of elections. They must do the level best to guide this Jammeh bull out of Gambia’s china shop, and save the long-suffering people of Gambia avoidable conflagration and bloodbath. The rest of the world can make all the righteous noises but they cannot help Africa until Africa first helps itself.

    Besides, unless Jammeh and Kabila are made to respect their countries’ constitutions and quit power, they risk setting dangerous and ignoble examples for other sit-tight despots to emulate. Even though what Jammeh and Kabila are doing is not entirely new in Africa, but the time has come for such to be stiffly resisted in order to send powerful signals across the continent that we have had enough of destructive sit-tight rule. If this is to be done, West Africa, erstwhile the most coup-prone of all the five sub-regions of Africa, must take the bull by the horns and set the positive example. This is a great test for President Muhammadu Buhari and his fellow ECOWAS plenipotentiaries, and they must know the rest of the world is eagerly waiting for them to act, and act decisively, first in defence of democracy, and second, to save Gambia from avoidable violence.

     

    • Prof. Fawole is of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State.
  • South Africa pulls out of  ICC

    South Africa pulls out of  ICC

    South Africa Friday served notice of its withdrawal from the  International Criminal Court  (ICC),the second African nation after Burundi to do so.

    Justice Minister Tshililo Michael Masutha said the notice had been submitted to the United Nations (UN) Secretary General.

    The pull out will become effective a year from now.

    Masutha told reporters that the ICC’s obligations are incompatible with laws giving sitting  leaders  diplomatic immunity.

    “The Implementation of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Act, 2002, is  in conflict and inconsistent with the provisions of the Diplomatic Immunity and Privileges Act,2001,” he told reporters.

    He said a bill on the matter would soon go to the parliament.

    International Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane said separately  that South Africa’s  laws are  incompatible with obligations under the ICC,pointing out  that government “found that its obligations with respect to the peaceful resolution of conflict at times are incompatible with the interpretation given by the International Criminal Court.”

    Created by the Rome Statute,the  Hague,Netherlands-based ICC comprises 124 states from around the world.

    It is the “court of last resort” and tries four types of crimes: genocide, crimes against humanity, crimes of aggression and war crimes.

    The country’s department of justice said via Twitter that South Africa was “hindered” by certain parts of the Rome Statute, primarily the one that “compels South Africa to arrest persons who may enjoy diplomatic immunity under customary international law, who are wanted by the ICC for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, to surrender such persons to the International Criminal Court.”

    It said the rule forced South Africa to turn over such persons even when the country was “actively involved in promoting peace, stability and dialogue in those countries.”

    During a 2015 visit to South Africa by Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, the ICC had requested his arrest on charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide stemming from the conflict in the Darfur region in western Sudan.

    Al-Bashir departed the country without getting arrested.

    The ICC has come under criticism by African leaders for what they say unfairly targets them.

  • ITF lists Nigeria for World Team Qualifiers in Tunisia

  • Buhari seeks dialogue to resolve political crisis in Burundi

    Buhari seeks dialogue to resolve political crisis in Burundi

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday urged the people and Government of Burundi to explore dialogue in resolving the current political differences in the country.

    He gave the advice while receiving the former Burundian President, Mr. Pierre Buyoya, at the State House, Abuja.

    According to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, President Buhari said that Nigeria would continue to support peace processes in the continent through the African Union (AU), which had already intervened in Burundi.

    He said since President Pierre Nkurunziza rejected the proposal of a ‘‘stabilizing force from the AU, we can’t impose it on him, but we will continue to opt for dialogue.’’

    ‘‘Nigeria has been playing a key role in the continent through the AU. We participated fully in ensuring a truce in Mali, and we want citizens to enjoy the impact of the truce, although the terrorists are not helping matters.

    ‘‘Nigeria is always committed to regional and continental peace, and we will continue to do our best,’’ he said.

    The President told the former President of Burundi, who is the High Representative of the AU Mission to Mali and the Sahel, that he remained hopeful that there would be an amicable solution to the situation in Burundi.

    In his remarks, the former President commended Nigeria for the role it played in restoring peace to Mali, adding that the AU was working to promote security in the Sahel, particularly through fighting trans-border terrorism.

    He also urged Nigeria to use its clout to work for peace in Burundi, warning that the “country is gradually inching towards a civil war.”

  • US to support Burundi with additional $31m

    The U.S. Government on Friday announced its plan to provide additional life-saving humanitarian assistance worth $31 million for refugees in Burundi.

    The African Media Hub of the Department of State said in a statement that the pledged fund would provide assistance for refugees in Burundi and Congolese refugees living in Burundi, who were “food insecure’’.

    “The U.S. announces more than $31 million in additional life-saving humanitarian assistance for refugees from Burundi, Congolese refugees living in Burundi, and others in Burundi, who are food insecure.

    “This new funding brings the total U.S. humanitarian assistance for the regional response to the Burundi crisis to more than $86 million since the start of the crisis in 2015,’’ it said.

    The statement said about $23million of the additional fund would be given to the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Burundi Situation Emergency Appeal.

    It also said about $8million of the fund would be devoted to support the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).

    According to the Statement, the additional funding will allow the UNHCR to provide new refugees in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia with basic life-saving assistance.

    It said that the fund would provide the refugees with shelter, clean water and sanitation facilities, healthcare, essential household items, programmes that protect children and activities that protect and respond to gender-based violence.

    “The US will continue to support those affected by this crisis, while working closely with humanitarian organisations and with countries in the region,’’ the statement added.

    More than 210,000 people have fled Burundi since April when Pierre Nkurunziza announced his bid for a third term in office.

    Nkurunziza won the disputed election in July but opposition continues, raising concerns that Burundi could descend into deadly violence.

    Of the 210,000 refugees in the DRC (14,300), Uganda (15,800), Rwanda (70,900), Tanzania (110,300), and Zambia (700), 56.2 per cent of their number are aged 17 and under.