Tag: Congo

  • 3.7m Nigerians are currently faced with food insecurity

    Abdullahi made this known on Tuesday in Abuja at the Second Conference of the “Feed the future Nigeria agricultural policy project organised by International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).

    He noted that several factors drove the nations challenging food and nutrition outlook.

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    He said it includes civic conflicts, climate change, and large scale of displacement, others are high food prices, poverty and high population amongst others.

    Abdullahi commended President Muhammadu Buhari for establishing  the National Food Security Council to address the challenges in the sector.

    He said to ensure sustainable food and nutrition security, there is need to maintain and strengthen the multi-sectoral approach to food security and nutritional policy.

    “We need to examine the intricacies of livelihoods issues of our citizens to design workable policy frameworks.

    “We also need to discuss the role of governance in achieving food security, creating space for interaction between different actors linked by common discourse,’’ he said.

    Abdullahi disclosed that the Eight Senate has passed several bills that would support the Nations food and nutrition security efforts.

    He observed that the issue of food security and nutrition is an urgent and continuous theme that must be daily emergency for any government.

    “Food security and nutrition must be tagged urgent because people, population and environmental dynamics will continue to make it so.

    “It must be continuous because survival is a continuous issue and so long as humanity exist the subject remains stuck with us,’’ he said.

    He said the move has become imperative because food security has been identified as a huge problem in Nigeria, as the country ranked 84th out of 119 countries on the global hunger index.

    Abdullahi said Nigeria came in just below the Republic of Congo.

    The three day conference is being attended by 100 experts from various sectors of agriculture to work on collaborative research for agricultural policy in Nigeria.

  • ‘49 drowned in Congo river boat accident’

    A boat tipped over in a river in northern Democratic Republic of Congo, drowning 49 people on board while about the same number survived the accident, a local official told a Congolese radio station.

    Richard Mboyo Iluka, vice governor of remote Tshuapa province, in northern Congo, told Radio Top Congo that the whaleboat had sunk with all of its passengers late on Wednesday.

    Deadly boat accidents are common in Congo, a vast, forested country which has few roads outside of major towns and is carved up by a network of rivers that drain the Congo Basin.

  • ’49 drown in river boat accident’

    Kinshasa-A boat tipped over in a river in northern Democratic Republic of Congo, drowning 49 people on board while about the same number survived the accident, a local official told a Congolese radio station.

    Richard Mboyo Iluka, vice governor of remote Tshuapa province, in northern Congo, told Radio Top Congo that the whaleboat had sunk with all of its passengers late on Wednesday.

    Deadly boat accidents are common in Congo, a vast, forested country which has few roads outside of major towns and is carved up by a network of rivers that drain the Congo Basin.

    For most people these rivers are the only means of travelling over long distances.

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    On July 29, 2010, 138 people died when an overloaded boat carrying passengers and goods capsized in rough water in the DRCongo.

    Congo’s government confirmed the incident, but gave a lower toll and said it may have been caused by low water levels on the Congo river due to the dry season.

    The accident took place on a stretch of the river in the western Bandundu province, east of Kinshasa, the country’s capital.

    “The boat was badly overloaded and it didn’t make the rough waters,” said Jolly Limengo, the provincial inspector of police. “Our provisional toll is 138 dead.

  • New Ebola deaths recorded in Congo – health ministry

    Two new deaths from Ebola and seven new confirmed cases have been recorded in Democratic Republic of Congo, the health ministry said on Tuesday.

    One of the deaths occurred in the provincial capital of Mbandaka, according to a daily bulletin. A nurse also died in the village of Bikoro, where the outbreak was first detected, ministry spokeswoman Jessica Ilunga told Reuters.

    The seven new confirmed cases were registered in Bikoro, the ministry said.

    Health officials administered an experimental vaccine on Monday to 33 medical workers and Mbandaka residents, WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told reporters in Geneva.

    The vaccine manufacturer Merck has provided WHO with 8,640 doses of the vaccine and an additional 8,000 doses are expected to be available in the coming days, WHO said.

    Congo’s ninth outbreak of Ebola since 1976 is believed to have killed at least 28 people so far.

    Officials are particularly concerned by its appearance in Mbandaka, a crowded trading hub on the Congo River with road, water and air links to Congo’s capital, Kinshasa.

    NAN reports that the WHO said it will need 26 million dollars for the Ebola Response in the DRC over the next three months.

    WHO said it had also released two million dollars from its Contingency Fund for Emergencies, to scale up the Ebola response.

    Read Also: Ebola outbreak spreads to DR Congo city

    The Government of DRC, with the support of WHO partners, is preparing to vaccinate high risk populations against Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in affected health zones.

    The organisation said health workers operating in affected areas were being vaccinated on Monday and community outreach had started to prepare for the ring vaccination.

    More than 7,500 doses of the rVSV-ZEBOV Ebola vaccine have been deployed to DRC to conduct vaccination in the northwestern Equator Province where 46 suspected, probable and confirmed Ebola cases and 26 deaths have been reported – as of Friday.

  • Ebola cases in Congo jumps to 14

    The number of confirmed Ebola cases in Congo has risen from three to 14, according to the Central African country’s Health Ministry.

    “In total since the start of the epidemic, there have been 45 cases of hemorrhagic fever, including 10 suspected cases, 21 probable cases, and 14 confirmed cases,” the ministry said in a statement on Friday.

    The ministry said just one person had been confirmed dead from the virus, but 25 people are suspected to have died from it.

    Earlier Thursday, the ministry had only three confirmed cases, one of which – the first in a major urban area – had prompted an urgent World Health Organisation meeting for Friday to decide what measures should be taken, including the possible declaration of a public health emergency.

    Ebola is a highly infectious virus that can cause fever and bleeding.

    The death rate runs as high as 90 per cent, but the lethal risk can be reduced significantly if patients are quickly isolated and if they receive fluids.

    Earlier this week, more than 5,000 Ebola vaccines arrived in Congo as part of the UN’s efforts to stem the outbreak.

    Similarly, the European Commission has released around 1.6 million euros (1.9 million dollars) to help tackle an Ebola outbreak in Congo, as well as organising flights to transport emergency staff and equipment to the affected areas.

    Of that, 1.5 million euros will provide logistics support to the WHO and 130,000 euros will help the Congolese Red Cross perform life-saving interventions.

    “All must be done to isolate the Ebola cases, especially since there has been a case in Mbandaka city,” said EU Humanitarian Aid Commissioner, Christos Stylianides.

    The EU is also ready to deploy its pool of voluntary specialists and medical assets, and its Copernicus satellite will provide emergency mapping services to help reach affected areas, a statement says.

  • Buhari signs air services pacts with Algeria, Congo, China

    Buhari signs air services pacts with Algeria, Congo, China

    President Muhammadu Buhari  yesterday  signed the Instruments of Ratification of the Bilateral Air Services Agreements between the Government of Nigeria, Algeria,  Congo,  China,  Qatar, and Singapore.

    It followed the approval by the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting.

    Nigeria’s aviation links with the respective countries are expected to improve significantly.

  • Dangote: From Congo with honour

    Dangote: From Congo with honour

    Foremost industrialist Aliko Dangote’s aggressive investment in Africa has earned him the Republic of Congo’s highest honour. He was conferred with ordre du merite Congolas, following the inauguration of Dangote Cement’s 1.5 million metric tonnes plant in Mfila, Congo. The $300 million investment is expected to boost Congo’s economy, Assistant Editor OKWY IROEGBU CHIKEZIE reports.

    His joy knew no bound. By the time President Denis Sassou Nguesso of Congo Brazzaville finished reeling off what the  Central African country would gain from Dangote’s 1.5 million metric tonne cement factory, their excitement was justified.

    For instance, with promises to directly engage over 1,000 Congolese and also provide livelihood to about 5,000 nationals of the poor Central African country indirectly, it was hardly surprising that the people and government of Congo conferred the nation’s highest honour on Chairman of Dangote Cement Alhaji Aliko Dangote.

    At the inauguration of the biggest cement plant in Mfila, an excited Nguesso said Congolese had no option but to honour Dangote  because of his huge investment in their country and the potential for his people in ancillary industries as well as its overall impacts on the economy.

    Nguesso did not mince words when he described the investment as an industrial revolution within the Economic Community of the Central African States (CEMAC). According to him, the coming on stream of the Dangote cement plant is timely and encouraging, because it is starting operations at a time government’s total revenues had plummeted by as much as 31.3 per cent.

    Also, the country’s revenues from the oil sector, the Congolese President said, had fallen to as low as 65.1 per cent since 2015 due to the slide in global crude oil prices. He, therefore, said his country was happy to host the huge investment, which was constructed at a conservative cost of $300 million. He also encouraged other Nigerian investors to take a cue from Dangote.

    Nguesso, however, reiterated that it’s only Africans that can develop Africa.

    He said his government has observed the operations of Dangote cement in other African countries and how it has helped boost their economies by sparking other allied industries. He expressed the  hope that the Congo situation would not be an exception.

    Incidentally, the Congolese president’s wish was not lost on the pan-African serial investor. Dangote, in his address, said the plant would boost Congo’s economy, conserve foreign exchange that would otherwise have been spent on imports for the country. It will also create employment opportunities down the value chain.

    Giving more details, Dangote, who said his company was delighted to have completed the plant on schedule, added that the 1.5 million metric tonnes per annum plant has more than doubled the cement production capacity of Congo Brazzaville, which stands at 2.550 million metric tonnes per annum, far in excess of national demand.

    “It is envisaged that this will contribute substantially to the availability and affordability of cement in the country and the Republic of Congo will no longer need to depend on imports to bridge the gap between demand and supply,” Dangote stated.

    He praised the bold economic reforms by Nguesso’s administration. “The construction industry, which is a major sector of the economy, is a beneficiary of your administration’s policies, and has been receiving investors’ attention.

    “We believe that our investment will contribute to Congo-Brazzaville’s current economic renaissance under Nguesso’s leadership,” Dangote said.

    He pointed out that his organisation received tremendous support and encouragement both from the government and people of Congo-Brazzaville, right from the conceptualisation stage of the cement project, to its final completion and commissioning.

    In appreciation of the good gesture of the government and the people, Dangote announced that without waiting to stabilise production, the cement company had already begun  its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) projects with the construction of a road.

    The road project, measuring 30 kilometres (KM) around Yamba, would have cost the local government approximately 240 million CFA to execute.

    That was not all. Dangote further stated: “We have also disbursed scholarships for students and we are also building a school and renovating a hospital within our host communities.

    “Apart from these, we have repaired a dilapidated bridge on a major highway at a cost of $300,000, to enable heavy duty vehicles to cross the bridge. As a policy, we also ensure that we give priority to qualified indigenes from our local host communities in our recruitment drive.”

    Dangote informed the gathering that his company’s total cement production capacity across Africa stood at 45.8 million metric tonnes per annum as at  end of May 2017. This makes it one of the biggest cement producers on the continent.

    He added that the company’s aspiration was to rank among the top 10 cement producers in the world by 2020.

    Dangote pointed out that the company’s key operations in Nigeria had significantly improved its fuel mix and this has helped it increase margins across the Group. “It is especially good for Nigeria because most of the coal we are using is mined in our own country,” he said.

    The foremost industrialist added that his pan-African operations are performing strongly with excellent sales growth in Cameroon, Ethiopia and Senegal, Ethiopia, Zambia, Cameroun and Tanzania.

    He added that the Congo-Brazzaville plant, which began operations in the third quarter of 2017, will be the fifth cement plant that would be inaugurated in the last two years.

    As it turned out, Dangote’s aggressive expansion programme has not gone unnoticed at least, by the government and people of Congo, who are the latest beneficiaries of the serial investor’s pan-African investment drive.

    The symbolic offer of a collection of green shrub by the indigenes to show their ancestors’ approval of the cement plant was the highpoint of their show of appreciation.

    The government and people of Nigeria, Dangote’s home country, are no less happy. For instance, President Muhammadu Buhari, who was represented at the event by a delegation led by the Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, praised Dangote and his cement company for championing Africa’s economic renaissance.

    Buhari said the sterling accomplishment of construction of cement plants across several African countries, made the Dangote Cement brand, and indeed Aliko Dangote himself, worthy ambassadors of Nigeria.

    President Buhari said his government has consistently supported and encouraged the Dangote Group in its quest to contribute its quota to the economic emancipation of the African continent, which is blessed with a plethora of natural resources.

    “I believe that it is only home-grown practical solutions that can address the myriad issues plaguing Africa today and one of such challenges that Africa has been grappling with for decades is infrastructure deficit.

    “I am confident that massive investments in cement production, which is a key driver of infrastructural development, will contribute in no small measure, to addressing this perennial problem,” Buhari said.

    He recalled with satisfaction that local cement manufacturers such as Dangote Cement, Lafarge and BUA, have exploited one of the solid minerals, limestone, which is a basic input for cement production.

    “The backward integration policy of the Federal Government in the cement sector, which was launched in 2002, has contributed to this success story by successfully substituting imports with local production, we have saved over $3 billion spent on cement importation into Nigeria, annually.

    “We have also started using cement for road construction in the country due to its numerous advantages over the more common bituminous road. Again, in this area, Dangote Cement is leading the charge, through AG-Dangote, its joint venture, with Andrade-Gutierrez, a construction giant in Brazil”, the Nigerian president stated.

     

  • Congo sets presidential election for December 2018

    Congo sets presidential election for December 2018

    Congo Independent Electoral Commission (CENI) has announced that the long-awaited presidential elections to replace President Joseph Kabila would take place on Dec. 23, 2018.

    Around 43 million voters have been registered for the vote so far, Corneille Nangaa told a news conference in Democratic Republic of Congo’s capital, Kinshasa.

    The election will be held on Dec. 23, 2018, with the results to be published on Jan. 9, 2019, and the president to be sworn in on Jan. 13, another official from the CENI, Jean Kalamba, also told reporters.

    The election, originally scheduled for late 2016, has been repeatedly delayed.

    Those delays have triggered unrest and raised fears the central African nation could slip back into the conflicts that killed millions around the turn of the century, mostly from hunger and disease.

    The electoral commission had said in September that the presidential vote could not take place until April 2019 at the earliest, and the opposition had warned that the population would “take matters into its own hands”.

    Opposition leaders reacted furiously to the new date.

    “The predatory regime wants to prolong the instability and misery of the people. We do not accept this fantasy calendar,” exiled opposition leader Moise Katumbi tweeted.

    Civil society activist organization Lucha on Twitter also condemned the announcement.

    Read: Russia 2018: Egypt qualify after beating Congo

    Dozens died in protests against Kabila’s refusal to step down at the end of his constitutional mandate in December 2016.

    U.S. envoy Nikki Haley said during a visit to meet with Kabila in October that the vote must happen in 2018 or it will lose international support.

    With no imminent election in sight, a political crisis has set in that is fueling increasing militia violence and lawlessness in Congo’s east and centre.

    Clashes between Congolese troops and supporters of a renegade colonel in Congo’s eastern city of Bukavu killed seven people on Sunday before he surrendered and turned himself in to UN peacekeepers.

    Kabila has ruled Congo since his father was assassinated in 2001.

    He says delays are owing to problems registering millions of voters across the vast, forested country.

    Opponents say he is using them to eventually remove term limits that prevent him from standing again, as presidents in neighboring Rwanda and Congo Republic have done.

    He denies that, but has not categorically said he will step aside.

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  • Egypt join Nigeria in qualifying, after beating Congo

    Egypt join Nigeria in qualifying, after beating Congo

    Egypt qualified for the 2018 World Cup finals after beating Congo 2-1 in a game which finished with nail-biting moments on Sunday in Alexandria.

    Egypt won after a penalty kick scored in the fifth minute of second half added time to reach the World Cup for the first time in over a quarter of a century.

    Liverpool FC star Mohamed Salah was the Egyptian hero, scoring both goals in a win that qualified them for their third finals, and the first since 1990.

    The euphoria was intense since Arnold Bouka-Moutou had stunned the hosts when equalising for Congo after 88 minutes.

    But the Egyptians’ World Cup hoodoo ended as Salah held his nerve late on.

    His dramatic winner sparked wild scenes of celebration both on and off the pitch.

    Several players and fans took to the field to celebrate while supporters wept with joy in the packed stands.

    Salah had broken the deadlock just after the hour on a tense night in Alexandria as he latched on to Mohamed El Nenny’s pass before poking home from close range.

    But an energised stadium was flattened just minutes from full time when Bouka-Moutou ghosted in at the far post to slam a volley home past Egypt goalkeeper Essam El Hadary.

    Hopes were raised as five minutes of stoppage time were indicated and in the penultimate of these, Egypt were awarded a penalty kick.

    Salah coolly sent the Congo keeper the wrong way to spark a night of celebrations across Egypt and end the record seven-time African champions’ poor World Cup record.

    In the three decades since their last World Cup appearance, Egypt have won four Africa Cup of Nations titles, and these were in 1998, 2006, 2008 and 2010.

    But they have never taken that form into World Cup qualifying.

    They had suffered repeated heart-break instead, with one of the most painful defeats coming in 2009 when they lost a bitterly-contested play-off against Algeria.

    The desperation to qualify ahead of the game was so great that Egypt’s Argentinian coach Hector Cuper admitted he was taking medication for high blood pressure.

    The victory gives Egypt an unassailable four-point lead over Uganda in Group E, with one round of fixtures left, while Ghana’s dreams also ended.

    The Egyptians are now the second African team to reach the finals after Nigeria went through on Saturday, with the continent’s remaining three places to be decided in November.

    Their qualification could be of great benefit to goalkeeper El Hadary who could become the oldest player at a World Cup ever if he plays next year.

    The record was set by Colombian goalkeeper Faryd Mondragon who played at the age of 43 at the 2014 World Cup, while El Hadary turns 45 next year.

    Earlier this year, the North Africans — whose first World Cup appearance was way back in 1934 — had finished runners-up at the Africa Cup of Nations.

    NAN

  • Gunmen abduct two Catholic priests in volatile eastern Congo

    Gunmen abduct two Catholic priests in volatile eastern Congo

    The National Episcopal Conference of Congo (CENCO) says gunmen kidnapped two Catholic priests in an area at the centre of over two years of massacres by unknown assailants.

    According to CENCO, the two priests, Charles Kipasa and Jean-Pierre Akilimali, were taken from Our Lady of the Angels parish in Bunyuka, located between the towns of Butembo and Beni, by a group of around 10 assailants just before 10 p.m. (2000 GMT) on Sunday.

    “Priests are men of God who devote their lives to the good of the population without a political agenda. To hurt them is to harm the community they serve,” CENCO said in a statement.

    CENCO called upon the security forces to do everything possible to free the men. Three other priests, abducted in the same area in October 2012, still have not been freed.

    Congo’s mineral-rich eastern borderlands, a tinderbox of ethnic tensions, has for more than two decades been the theater of successive wars and rebellions.

    Beni has been among the most volatile zones in the last two years.

    A series of nighttime massacres that began in October 2014, mostly carried out with hatchets and machetes by unidentified assailants, has killed hundreds of civilians.

    Over 930 prisoners were freed in June in an attack on the town’s main prison that also killed 11 people.

    Another dozen people were killed when a so-called Mai-Mai militia coalition launched raids on the city centre.