Tag: South Africa

  • ‘Anambra needs change in leadership’

    ‘Anambra needs change in leadership’

    Mr Ikechukwu Anyene, former President of Nigeria Union, South Africa, says Anambra needs a change in leadership to take the state to greater heights.

    He spoke against the backdrop of the governorship election in Anambra which the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has fixed Nov. 18.

    Anyene told reporters on telephone from Pretoria, South Africa on Friday that the people of the state had the right to choose a leader that would satisfy their yearnings.

    He said that the people should come out on the Election Day and make the choice of candidate to steer the state.

    Anyene said that from analysis, Mr Oseloka Obazee, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate had potential to move the state forward.

    “As Secretary to the State Government, Obazee assisted in the building of a new Anambra State under the leadership of former governor, Mr Peter Obi.

    “Given his experience as a tested administrator, he will deliver because he has the pedigree.

    “The choice of Chidi Onyemelukwe, as deputy gubernatorial candidate is a good combination that will move the state forward,” Anyene said.

    He urged the candidates to focus on issues and expected quality service to the people.

    “The parties and their candidates should talk less on individuals or character assassination. Anambra is matured enough to have credible leaders.

    “They should focus on issues that will impact positively on the masses.

    “ I also appeal to the people to make the right choice by coming out to vote on the Election Day,” Anyene said.

    NAN

  • 36 Dutch visitors robbed in South Africa

    36 Dutch visitors robbed in South Africa

    South Africa ’s Tourism Minister Tokozile Xasa, has on Wednesday expressed concern that an incident in which Dutch tourists were robbed could damage the country’s Tourism Industry.

    Thirty-six Dutch tourists who arrived in the country on Sunday were robbed in their tour bus after leaving Johannesburg’s main airport, the Police Ministry said in a statement.

    The bus was stopped by a vehicle with police markings, the statement said, adding that one man was also dressed in police uniform.

    A group of armed men boarded the bus, tied up the tour guide and driver, and robbed the tourists of their belongings, local media reported.

    “That kind of a barbaric incident sends a very bad reputation about our country,’’ Xasa said on a World Tourism Day.

    “We want to market South Africa as a safe destination,’’ she said.

    The tourists cancelled the rest of their trip and have now returned home, according to Dutch media.

    The Netherlands’ ambassador to South Africa, Marisa Gerards, tweeted about the incident on Tuesday, calling it “a shocking, tragic & impactful robbery Very traumatic for these NL tourists.’’

    South Africa is notorious for its high crime rates.

    Britain updated its travel advice for the country, warning its nationals to “be vigilant in and around the airport and when driving away.’’

  • S/Africa: Ex-AU commission chairwoman sworn in as MP

    S/Africa: Ex-AU commission chairwoman sworn in as MP

    Former African Union (AU) Commission Chairwoman, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, has been sworn in as new Member of Parliament (MP) in South Africa amid speculations that she will be promoted to cabinet position.

    Parliamentary Spokesperson Moloto Mothapo said “Dlamini-Zuma will immediately undergo an induction programme and be provided with necessary tools of trade to assist her with carrying out her parliamentary duties without delay.”

    It had been speculated that the deployment of Dlamini-Zuma in Parliament would be used as springboard to propel her to cabinet position in an imminent cabinet reshuffle.

    However, Dlamini-Zuma, emerging from the swearing ceremony, told reporters that she had no idea of a cabinet reshuffle.

    She said: “as far as I’m concerned, I’m coming as a Member of Parliament. I’ve been sworn in. That’s all I know.”

    Dlamini-Zuma is seen as President Jacob Zuma’s preferred successor in the 2019 general elections.

    According to opposition Democratic Alliance (DA), Dlamini-Zuma’s elevation to MP and likely a cabinet minister seems to be a carefully orchestrated move to buttress her presidential campaign.

    DA Chief Whip John Steenhuisen said: “it amounts to nothing less than state resources being used to support a candidate for ANC presidency.”

    According to the DA, the decision to send Dlamini-Zuma to parliament also seems to precipitate yet another cabinet reshuffle.

    “Those members of Zuma’s cabinet who were outspoken against Zuma, and those who belong to the rebellious South African Communist Party (SACP), are certain to be fired by Zuma in the cabinet reshuffle,’’ the DA said.

  • Learning from Liberia

    A former university course mate of mine from Liberia gave me a call recently. He was among several students from Liberia, Sierra Leone, Namibia and South Africa that Nigeria offered scholarship to study in the country in the 1990s. Yes, Nigeria was really the big brother of Africa back then. We played a key and strategic role toward the end of colonial rule in South Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), Angola and Mozambique and in the end of apartheid in South Africa.

    We were also a staunch supporter of the Frontline States of Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe which was established to achieve democratic rule in South Africa. Back then we had a robust foreign policy thrust with Africa as the “centerpiece.” This was the major reason most Nigerians were saddened that we were not duly recognised and accorded our dues and earned respect during the burial of Nelson Mandela.

    My ex-course mate expressed sadness at the state of insecurity in the country. Because of the Liberian civil war, he travelled to Guinea as a refugee from where he came to Nigeria and was granted scholarship by the government. He is one grateful Liberian that sees himself as a Nigerian any day.

    “Are Nigerians aware of what they are toying with?” was his question to me after we finished discussing old times. “The untold misery I witnessed in my country and Sierra Leone is better imagined. I hope Nigerians will rise up and nip this in the bud before it gets out of hand. Nobody is safe during a civil war; we are still battling to put ourselves together over two decades after the war. I love Nigeria for giving me a degree and pray this ‘madness’ ends before degenerating into something else. I am eternally grateful for all you guys did for me.”

    After I hung up I reflected on some of the gory stories he told about their civil war, some of which I already knew because I have friends who fought in that brutal war, some never came back alive. I must confess that sometimes I feel weighed down, especially with the senseless killings of innocent citizens by elusive “herdsmen.” And now IPOB has been added to the dangerous mix just when we are trying to shake off Boko Haram.

    Surely, we all hope Nigeria pulls through. But that should not be taken for granted or to underscore the gravity of the issues the country faces in the context of a changing global order and the need for deep thinking and strategic action. This is time to put on our thinking cap on and be reasonable for once.

    Samuel Huntington once noted that the force that seems to be moving the world these days is not political ideology, but political identity. Everyone is asking the question: Who are we? And who are we not?

    The question is imperative for today. While answering the former may be contentious because of inflamed ethnic, regional and religious tensions in Nigeria today, the latter can be answered immediately that we are not suicide bombers neither are we terrorists or murderers.

    In the midst of this it appears our intelligentsias have gone to sleep. Gone are the days when our ivory towers use to be a beehive of heightened intellectual activities. Gone also are the days when economists, sociologists, historians and political scientists gather to take interdisciplinary approaches to solving complex national problems that the government often find very useful.

    This is why it is frightening that deep thinking is sorely missing in Nigeria and the need to urgently popularise it again. When the bombs started to go off in the Northeast, Abuja and elsewhere, there were no serious workshop and strategic meetings organised by groups to rethink the social and political currents of the new wave of terrorism. Apart from a touch here and there, we almost never heard insightful expositions by our scholars and social critics. This is a clear evidence of the dearth of public reason.

    The sad story is that this grave crisis has not elicited the expected rigorous thinking and analysis from policy and intellectual circles in Nigeria. There have been no high-profile intellectual events to headline a serious commitment on the part of researchers and policy thinkers to properly understand and prepare for what may be a persistent challenge of the 21th Century for Nigeria.

    With the exception of some editorials and often biased op-eds, we lack a commendable civic engagement aimed at proffering solutions to our crises.  How many seminars, workshops and focus group meetings have been convened to think through our crises? Definitely, the absence of such sort of engagements illustrates the low-energy public intellectualism that defines our public space.

    It is also depressing, but true, that it is mainly in foreign think tanks and centres that our crises are receiving the quality attention it deserves from scholars and policymakers. The government, intellectual and civil society actors have not done well in engaging with the challenges of nation building. The danger of this lack of intellectual rigour and vigour is that we may not effectively overcome these challenges if efforts are not made to contain it.

    Is because of our ‘underdeveloped’ nature? The predicament of ‘underdevelopment’ approximates to the chronic absence of problem-solving thinking. Whether viewed in terms of the weakness of institutions or the low quality of goods and services, countries that persist in underdevelopment are those that are unable to socially produce quality solutions to environmental, social, economic and political challenges.

    It is not rocket science that developed societies have successfully mainstreamed their universities and other epistemic communities with their policymaking institutions. The marriage of knowledge production and policymaking is definitive of societies that are on the forward march.

    Prof Nail Fergusson, a Harvard historian, in one of his books: “The Great Degeneration: How Institutions Decay and Economies Die” said the real issue for societies is the quality of public reason. He shows how the degeneration of western society occurred or could occur. What stands out from his analysis however is that the quality of institutions for coordinating social transactions makes the critical difference between prospering and declining societies. So, when societies think clearly and act intelligently, they create superior social institutions to solve their problems. But when public reason is weak then problems persist or compound.

    The dilemma of public reason in Nigeria is very evident and troubling. The quality of debate is also depressing. In the place of logic there is anger and fury. This is where a vibrant civil society comes in. The focus of civil society is formulating policies and programmes that affect social and economic outcomes for the people. It plays its role best when it plays the policy game and not politically partisan. Of course, policy is politics. But that is only to the extent that policy seeks to achieve broader political outcomes. Not just partisan outcomes.

    As we grapple with our security challenges, we need to remind ourselves that most of the more difficult problems we face today are not the products of mere partisan politicking. They are outcomes of leadership. And leadership begins with mobilising ideas that could change situations.

    Our continued underdevelopment is a product of low quality public reason. If we don’t improve the quality of public reasons, if civil leaders don’t see problems as opportunity for creative thinking and mobilise social engagement in search of solutions, we will wake up after much politicking and many elections and discover we have simply compounded our problems. Just like my Liberian ex-course mate prays, I also pray we don’t get to that stage.

    In order to bypass that stage, we need to realise that creative ideas are not generated through superficial one-off encounter; they are generated through persistent, intense, rational and deep thinking. We must realise that solutions to social problems do not end with good ideas alone. There should be great leaders as well who can use the good ideas generated to mobilise citizens toward quality and positive collective actions.

    How we need such leaders in these trying times.

  • S/A court to hear state’s appeal against Pistorius

    S/A court to hear state’s appeal against Pistorius

    South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal will hear the state’s appeal against the six-year murder sentence handed to Paralympic gold medallist Oscar Pistorius on Nov. 3, the National Prosecuting Authority ( NPA ) said on Tuesday.

    The state will argue that six years in jail is too lenient a sentence for the murder by Pistorius of Reeva Steenkamp, his girlfriend, in 2013.

    “The state, in the papers, will stipulate clearly that the sentence imposed is shockingly low,” said NPA spokesman, Luvuyo Mfaku.

    “The presiding officer has the discretion to deviate from the minimum prescribed sentence when compelling and substantial circumstances exist.

    “But… with this matter, the presiding officer exercised that discretion in a very lenient manner.”

    Women’s rights groups in a country beset by high levels of violent crime against women say Pistorius had received preferential treatment compared to non-whites and those without his wealth or international celebrity status.

    The Court told state prosecutors and the defence in November that they would need to argue their cases in court before it would rule on the matter.

    State prosecutors, led by advocate Gerrie Nel, say the sentence was too lenient as the jail term was less than half the 15 years they had sought.

    In his arguments at the trial, Nel said Pistorius had shown no remorse for the 2013 shooting.

    Lawyers for the gold medalist, known as the “Blade Runner” for his carbon-fibre prosthetics, say he did not deliberately kill model and law graduate Steenkamp.

    The athlete was originally convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to five years in jail.

    That conviction was increased to murder by the court in December, 2015 and his sentence increased to six years by trial Judge Thokozile Masipa.

    She dismissed in August, 2016, a request by Nel to appeal Pistorius’ sentence, saying she was not persuaded that there was a reasonable prospect of success at another court.
    Nel then launched his case at the court, in Bloemfontein, 400 km (250 miles) southwest of Johannesburg.

  • Nollywood actor, makes case for  united Africa

    Nollywood actor, makes case for united Africa

    Nollywood actor, John Okafor, says Africans need  to be more united to attract the attention of the international community.

    Okafor, popularly known as Mr Ibu,  told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Saturday that the process should start from individual countries  through the sub-regions to the  continental level.

    “ The process of unity should start from our individual countries to the sub-regions and then on to the continental level.

    “ We need to be more united at a time like this  to get the desired attention from the international community,” he said.

    Okafor said that media reports emanating from Africa were  always about conflicts and disasters.

    “ In some of the sub-regions, you do not need a visa to enter individual countries. My vision is that Africa should go beyond that.

    “ Let there be an  Africa without  borders. If you are an African, you should  get a visa at the point of entry.

    “ Let us endeavour  to become one united Africa. I am proposing one brother, one nation,” Okafor said.

    The artiste also canvassed a common currency in the continent, saying  Africa has the abundant natural and human resources to support its economy.

    “ The African Union should champion this cause and ensure that the continent is formidable, united and gets the desired attention from the rest of the world.

    “ Africa is not far from Europe. We can do so many things together for the benefit of our people,” the actor said.

  • Dangote approaches PPC about takeover deal

    Dangote approaches PPC about takeover deal

    Dangote Cement has approached South African cement producer, ( PPC ), for takeover bid, but talks are at preliminary stages, Media reported on Thursday.

    PPC is already considering a bid by local rival, AfriSam, which launched a new all-share bid that values PPC at about 9.2 billion rand

    Dangote Cement bid for PPC is a way to increase its visibility in the South Africa and surrounding SADC market.

    PPC offers the prospect of a much larger business than DangCems current operation in South Africa through Sephaku Cement.

    Annual Financial Statement for the full Year ended March 31, 2017 shows that Sephaku Cement had revenues of R2.28 billion (178 million dollars) in 2016 (see Fig 1).

    This compares to PPC which had revenues of R9.6 billion ($748 million) in 2016, about four times that of Sephaku.

    Obviously DangCem would love to own the bigger company and has signalled it would be open to a sale of all or part of its cement operations in Sephaku Cement to win regulatory approval for a takeover.

  • Emzor CEO, others bag awards in South Africa

    Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Emzor Pharmaceutical Industries, Mrs.   Stella Okoli, is to be honoured at the inaugural Africa Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum (AWIEF) Awards on October 5, at the third AWIEF Conference and Exhibition at the Century City Conference Centre in Cape Town.

    Others to be honoured include  Abisola Ijalana, M12 Photography, Temie Giwa–Tubosun, LifeBank, Deola Sagoe, House of Deola,  Oke Maduewesi, Zaron International, Mary Olushoga, African Women Power (AWP) Network and Ndidi Nwuneli, LEAP Africa.

    Others are Barbara Mallinson, Obami (South Africa),   Tracey Chambers, The Clothing Bank (South Africa), Karine Sar, Deline’s Gift (Senegal), Sabetha Mwambenja, Covenant Bank for Women (Tanzania), Swaady Martin, YSWARA (South Africa) and  Aisha Pandor, SweepSouth.com (South Africa).

    Others include Annette Muller, FLEXY (South Africa), Hyasintha Ntuyeko, Kasole Secrets (Tanzania), Refilwe Sebothoma, PBM Creations (South Africa),  Mame Khary Diene, Bioessence Laboratories (Senegal);    Sonia Paiva, Woman Farmer Foundation (Swaziland), Jacqueline Mkindi, Tanzania Horticultural Association (Tanzania),Thandi Ndlovu, Motheo Construction Group (South Africa) and Marah Hativagone, Codchem (PVT) (Zimbabwe)

    Norway’s Ambassador to South Africa, Botswana, Madagascar and Namibia, Trine Skymoen, is expected to be the keynote speaker at the gala event.

     

  • Union confirms killing of Nigerian in South Africa

    Union confirms killing of Nigerian in South Africa

    The Nigerian Community in South Africa, on Wednesday confirmed the killings of one of its members, Mr Clement Ofoma, at Springs town, near Johannesburg.

    Ofoma, 35, a native of Obosi, Idemili North Local Government Area of Anambra, was a businessman based in the town.

    Mrs Toewry Ofoma, the wife of the deceased and South African, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) at Springs that about 10 South African policemen arrested her husband from his shop on Tuesday.

    She said the police alleged that he was a drug dealer, but her husband denied the allegations.

    “They searched our house, his store, and other places, but did not find any substance.

    “In the process, they tortured him to confess where he kept the drugs, but my husband insisted he had nothing.

    “The police used cellophane bag to cover his face and at a point, he was struggling to breathe and became unconscious. By the time they took him to a hospital, he was pronounced dead, Toewry said.

    Meanwhile, the chairman of Obosi Development Union in Springs, Mr Omezie Onyire, has expressed shock on the death of Ofoma.

    “He was an active member of our union and contributed to its improvement.

    “We condemn his alleged killing by the police and we will pursue this case to its logical end,” he said.

    Addressing Nigerians in the town, Mr Adetola Olubajo, President, Nigeria Union, South Africa, said the matter had been reported to the Nigerian mission.

    “We have also reported the matter to the Independent Police Investigating Department, a body that investigates crimes committed by the police.

    “Also, our legal department will follow the case until justice is done, he said.

    Olubajo advised them to be law abiding, be united and form a chapter of the union in their area.

    NAN reports that some Nigerians in the town who staged a protest at the police station were dispersed by the police who fired rubber bullets.

    On Aug. 30, a Nigerian, Kingsley Ikeri, 27, a native of Mbaitolu Local Government Area of Imo, was allegedly killed by the police while being interrogated for being in possession of drugs.

  • Union engages South Africa on killing of Nigerians

    Union engages South Africa on killing of Nigerians

    Mr Adetola Olubajo, new President of Nigeria Union, South Africa, says the body will engage the Federal Government and its South African counterpart on the safety of Nigerians in that country.

    He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Pretoria, South Africa on Tuesday that the union was worried about incessant killing of Nigerians in that country.

    Read also: South Africans forcibly take over Nigerian’s house

    “The killing of Nigerians in South Africa is worrisome and unacceptable because the statistics increase daily.

    “We have decided to engage the Federal government and its South African counterpart to work with them and ensure the safety of our people.

    “The union will put pressure where necessary because our people are not happy with the situation,” he said.

    Olubajo, the immediate past Secretary General of the union, said Nigerians had been encouraged to work with community-based organisations to fight crime in their areas.

    “The union has adopted some safety measures aimed at sensitizing our people on dangers of crime.

    “We have decided to engage various Nigerian organisations on the need to speak with one voice on issues that affect them.

    “It is time for us to unite for a common purpose of having a safe environment for Nigerians in South Africa,” the President said.

    He also said that the union would inaugurate a legal department to give legal advice and ensure justice in all cases involving Nigerians.

    Read also: Dabiri-Erewa deplores killing of another Nigerian in South Africa

    “The department will be headed by a Nigerian practicing attorney in South Africa and he has already started work,” he said.

    Olubajo said the union would engage the Nigerian mission to change their approach to the handling of cases of Nigerians killed in South Africa because their tactics had not yielded results.