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Posts Tagged ‘Democratic Republic’

Emerging infections: No good deed goes unpunished

Smallpox has gone, but monkeypox is now rearing its ugly head

ONE of the greatest public-health victories of the last century was the eradication of smallpox. After the disease was pronounced extinct, in 1980, people stopped using the smallpox vaccine. That seemed the ultimate symbol of technology’s triumph over a medieval scourge.

Alas, it turns out that the end of vaccination has unleashed new demons. Researchers have long suspected that smallpox vaccine also provides protection against diseases such as monkeypox and cowpox, and three decades ago a committee of experts weighed up whether ending vaccination for smallpox might allow one of those diseases to spread in humans. They decided this was unlikely. Now, a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences suggests they may have been wrong. A team led by Anne Rimoin of the University of California, Los Angeles, conducted surveys of people living in the centre of the Democratic Republic of Congo. They found a dramatic surge in monkeypox—a disease which, though not as bad as smallpox, kills up to 10% of those it infects. …

Serbian medics to care for UN chief

Serbia’s medical team in in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have been tasked with providing medical care for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. The UN chief is due to visit that African country for the 50th anniversary of its independence.

DR Congo oil tanker blaze kills 200

At least 200 people are feared dead after an oil tanker exploded and set fire to parts of a village in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The truck, travelling from Tanzania, overturned in the village of Sange near the country’s eastern border.

UN investigates massacre claims in Congo

The UN is investigating reports of a massacre by Ugandan rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo. A senior UN official says as many as 100 people were killed in the alleged attack, which is believed to have taken place in February.

UN warns on early Congo pull-out

The UN’s top humanitarian official has warned against a premature withdrawal of the organization’s military force from the Democratic Republic of Congo. The Congolese government wants the UN mission to leave the troubled country by the end of August next year.

ML unification stressed


LAHORE – Speakers at an Iqbal Day function organised at Aiwan-e-Karkunan Tehrik-e-Pakistan on Wednesday to mark the 72nd death anniversary of the Philosopher-Poet of the East Dr Allama Muhammad Iqbal underscored the need for grooming and bringing to the fore a leadership having the vision of Allama Iqbal and the Quaid-i-Azam in a bid to transform Pakistan into a strong Islamic, welfare and democratic state capable of steering ahead the Ummah. The speakers wished unification of Muslim League, the party which created Pakistan.
Former defence minister and Sindh chief minister Syed Ghous Ali Shah and former NWFP chief minister Syed Sabir Shah were guests of honour while Chairman NPT Majid Nizami presided over the meeting. A cross-section of personalities from political, literary and social circles addressed the meeting. The hall was packed to capacity with motivated audience including women who also occupied seats in the corridors of the Aiwan. The hall burst into excitement, raising spirited slogans in favour of Iran and President Ahmadinejad when the Iranian Ambassador came to the dais. He delivered the message of Iranian President Ahmadinejad to the audience. The Iranian Ambassador Mashallah Shakiri narrated a lengthy discourse from the IqbalÂ’s poetry during which he was visibly moved. He made a confession that Iranian Islamic revolution greatly owed to the poetry of Allama Iqbal, which inspired his Iranian readers.
Legendary kalam-e-Iqbal reciters Bashir Hussain Nazim, Hafiz Marghoob Hamdani and Jamshed Azam Chishti enthralled the audience with recitation from IqbalÂ’s poetry. Syed Sabir Shah had to face tough criticism for PML to accept Khyber Pakhtunkhwa as the new name of NWFP.
Speaking on the occasion, Majid Nizami said that there would have been no Pakistan, had there been no Allama Iqbal. The Quaid came back to Pakistan on the advice of Allama Iqbal, led the Muslim League and adopted Pakistan Resolution in 1940. Pakistan came into being seven years after the adoption of the Resolution and we are now a free nation. He, however, lamented over the fact that the creator party was divided into factions and those who did not know who the Quaid was and what his ideology was, were ruling the country. There should have been a vision of Iqbal and the Quaid to make Pakistan an Islamic, democratic and welfare state.
Pir Sabir Shah said promotion of Pakistan ideology was not the duty of Majid Nizami only, rather every citizen should become Majid Nizami. He said, “We are following aliens’ theories instead of our own. Pakistan has a strategic importance.”
He said the enemy had hurled allegations against the Quaid but even the worst enemy could not point a finger on the QuaidÂ’s character and his devotion to Islam. According to Sirojini Naedo, if Patel, Ghandhi, Nehru, Bacha Khan and others had been in Muslim League and alone Quaid in Congress, India would never have been divided. He said Haji Adeel of ANP who had hurled remarks on Quaid was another Salman Rushdie, as, he abused the Quaid while living in QuaidÂ’s Pakistan. AdeelÂ’s party and leaders never accepted Pakistan and their agenda was to break Pakistan. Ghaffar Khan even did not like his burial in Pakistan.
Sabir Shah faced tough questions on the issue of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa from the audience. He said two assemblies had passed the resolution. The MQM, Fazal-ur-Rehman, PPP and UNO also pleaded for Pakhtunkhwa.
Nawaz Sharif, however, resisted and finally the word Khyber was given lead over Pakhtunkhwa. Khyber reminds us of Hazrat AliÂ’s conquest of Khyber while Khyber Pass was the gateway for Islamic forces in the sub-continent. The ANP has numerical strength in the Assembly which he said was the ugly side of the democracy in which heads are counted and not evaluated. As far as HazaraÂ’s demand for a separate province is concerned, it will also be resolved amicably. He said the ANP had also emphasised that if names of Major Abbot, Hari Singh Nalwa and Mansingh are accepted for Abbotabad, Haripur and Mansehra respectively why Pakhtunkhwa should not be accepted. The PML changed the name with Khyber as Pakhtunkhwa was a conspiracy to lay foundation for the break-up of Pakistan which the PML defeated.
Syed Ghous Ali Shah said, “We needed a leadership which could act according to Iqbal and the Quaid’s vision.” He said Nawaz Sharif was trying to come true to our expectations and he was treading the path of the Quaid.
Nawaz Sharif revived the judiciary with a long march, did nuclear detonation despite ClintonÂ’s telephone not to do so.. He said the Kalabagh Dam should be built with consensus. He, however, said if coal can provide energy for 80,000 years why to unearth controversial issues. He called for giving support to Nawaz Sharif.
PML-N Central Leader Makhdoom Javed Hashmi said Dr Allama Iqbal had foreseen the current mega changes in the world and particularly, he had predicted that China, Pakistan, Islamic Republic of Iran and Afghanistan would be the focal territories for long-term peace in the world. Allama Iqbal wished Iran to be the Geneva of Islamic world, he said. He also predicted that the western civilization would ultimately prove to be the death warrant for its own people in near future. “This came true when in world War II, Christians world killed each other,” he said.
Makhdoom said World War-1 was a crusade, launched against Islam, which finally sliced Ottoman Caliphate into many small countries, but during the World War-II, as Iqbal had anticipated, the western countries fought against their own civilization and inhabitants for their vested interests, causing millions of causalities in a single jerk. He said it was unprecedented in the history of the world that four new countries had been created for a king and his three sons, by disintegrating the great Ottoman Caliphate.
PML-N leader further said Pakistan was fighting the war against terrorism for the US, India and Israel. “This was the bitter result of American influence. Consequently our rulers are now scared of purchasing oil from our brother state Iran,” he added. Makhdoom Javed Hashmi said Iqbal was a multilingual poet of hope who desired a new separate Islamic State for the Muslims, which should lead the world. “Now we as a nation and according to the philosophy of the great poet are fully capable of leading the Islamic world,” he added.
PML-N leader Khawaja Saad Rafiq while addressing the meeting, said the followers of Iqbal’s philosophy of ‘Khudi’ was not to bow down before America. He said that today’s Pakistan also is not representing the thoughts of Iqbal because the rulers of the country did not try to make the country according to the vision of Iqbal and the Quaid and instead they ignored their teachings. Even politicians, establishment and the judiciary of the country seemed wandering far away from their thoughts.
He said those parliamentarians, supporting the 18th Amendment were just human beings and not angels, so they could also make mistakes, and there are flaws in the 18th Amendment. He said some persons wanted to create differences between the judiciary and the parliament, and in fact, they were not friends of the country. Commenting on NWFP, he described it a crucial issue, which must be resolved with national consensus but later, all the political parties of the country backed out of their commitment in this regard and held PML-N alone responsible for the change of its name. “Although, PML-N leadership did not consult us in this regard”, he added.
He stressed upon all the political parties of the country and the provinces to build consensus on construction of Kalabagh Dam as it was being built on the issue of change of name of NWFP by forgetting all the differences. He also appealed to the leadership of Pakistan Muslim League PML-N to plead the case of Kalabagh Dam as well. He condemned the inherited politics and stressed the need for holding elections in all political parties of the country saying that first of all political parties must be reformed for the sake of reforming country. He said Political Parties Act must be strengthened for the sake of strong democratic system.
Allama Iqbal’s grandson Waleed Iqbal, an advocate, said Iqbal was the poet of Islamic renaissance who showed Muslims the path of collective ego. Waleed also stressed that, “Allama Iqbal had realized the need for framing a separate state for the Muslims of the Sub-Continent during his early days when he had returned after completing his higher education from Europe”. He also thanked Islamic Democratic Republic of Iran for promoting Iqbal in such an impressive manner across the world. Waleed recited numerous Persian and Urdu verses besides interpreting them in a versatile manner delivering message for the rulers.
Islamic Democratic Republic of Iran ambassador Masha Allah Shakari said on the occasion that the Islamic Revolution of Iran was the genuine outcome of IqbalÂ’s philosophy and the current shape of Islamic Republic of Iran was the true interpretation of the message of the legendary poet. The honorable guest also recited Persian poetry of Allama Iqbal, saying that the great poet had huge reverence for Iran and wished the state to be the concrete citadel for the unification of the Muslim World.
In his address, Nazria Pakistan vice chairman, Dr Rafiq Ahmed said that creation of Pakistan was due to the benevolence of Iqbal so we pay tribute to him by celebrating Iqbal Day every year. He said the poetry of Iqbal in fact was the name of revolutionary thoughts and IranÂ’s Revolution also got inspiration from his poetry and it changed the thoughts of people of Iran. He said Nazria Pakistan Trust was also playing its due role for creating awareness about the Pakistan Movement and thoughts of Iqbal among the youngsters. He said Iqbal was the person who had convinced the Qauid with respect to leading the nation.
Hafiz Muhammad Idrees of Jamaat-e-Islami, who represented Qazi Hussain Ahmed, paid tributes to poetry of Iqbal and his services for Islam. He said his poetry in fact reflected love for the holy Prophet and Allah. He said he was ‘Poet of jihad’ and through his poetry we could tell the world that jihad did not mean terrorism but meant a struggle to fight for the right cause.
Prof. Dr. Akram Ikram Shah said the humanity was the focal point of IqbalÂ’s poetry and he told the world through his poetry that Islam was the only religion of the world, which taught showing affection to the humanity.
Khushnood Ali Khan, President CPNE, criticized the rulers and said that they were negating the Iqbal’s theory of Pakistan by torturing the innocent people of the country and humiliating them when they go to streets in support of their rights. “This is not the country, which was dreamt by Iqbal”, he added. He said the rulers even did not take action against senator Haji Adeel who in his statement had said that Islam is an additional word in Islamic Republic of Pakistan. Criticising the role of opposition, he said nobody had raised voice against price hike in the country and even condemned the raise in electricity and gas tariffs by PEPCO and OGRA.
Talking on the occasion, Sayed Faseeh Iqbal of Balochistan said the presence of such a large number of people on this auspicious day symbolises a living Pakistan and such ceremonies should also be held in the other provinces.
He suggested that all Pakistanis should also study IqbalÂ’s Persian poetry because the Persian poetry of Iqbal was basis of Islamic revolution in Islamic Democratic Republic of Iran. He added that Persian had played its pivotal role in enlightening the hearts of the Muslims and it was IqbalÂ’s benevolence that he raised the slogan of the Muslims while presently we are hearing anti-Pakistan slogans and in this regard it is need of the hour to be united to avoid any destruction or loss to the country.
He added that construction of Kala Bagh Dam was also the need of the hour and it should be constructed forthwith to overcome the energy crisis, adding that Majid Nizami was reminding us the forgotten lessons, which were needed to make Pakistan a prosperous country.
He further said we merely claimed that Iqbal was our national hero while Iranians followed his teachings and learnt a lot from his Persian poetry, saying Iqbalyat should have been introduced and taught in the seminaries in order to overcome the problems. He said Pakistan possessed huge stocks of coal, which was sufficient to meet the needs of prevailing energy crises. Faseeh said Pakistanis had been surrounded by innumerable conspiracies, which could only be tackled by following the thoughts of Iqbal.

Krishna jazz from faraway Congo

The tall dark African servitor from Congo spreads the gospel of Hindu god Krishna on the east coast of Africa with a saxophone, guitar and jazz.
“Hare Rama, Hare Krishna, Rama Rama, Hare Hare…”, his gentle baritone fills the air as he plucks a plaintive riff — in the American bluegrass tradition — on his guitar.
The [...]

Annular solar eclipse begins in Delhi

The millennium’s longest annular solar eclipse began in the national capital Friday but fog and cloudy skies marred a clear view of the celestial spectacle.
Although seen only partially from here, it nevertheless enthralled enthusiastic onlookers who gathered to watch the celestial phenomenon at the Nehru Planetarium and other places where special arrangements were made to [...]

Jeremić continues African tour in Congo

Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremić has arrived to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where he will meet with President Joseph Kabila. Jeremić will also meet with the country’s Foreign Minister Alex Thambwe.

Court gives bail to Congo’s Bemba

Jean-Pierre Bemba at pre-trial hearings at the Hague on 12 January 2009

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has ordered the conditional release of Congolese ex-Vice-President Jean-Pierre Bemba ahead of his war crimes trial.

However, the court said he would not be freed until it was decided which country would host him.

Mr Bemba, who led a rebel group during the Democratic Republic of Congo’s civil war, was arrested in Belgium last year and extradited to The Hague.

The charges relate to unrest in the Central African Republic.

Mr Bemba says his troops were not under his command once they crossed the border into CAR to help then-President Ange-Felix Patasse put down a coup attempt in 2002.

After a peace deal in DR Congo in 2003, Mr Bemba laid down his arms and joined an interim government as vice-president.

Conditions

An ICC statement said a pre-trial chamber had found that Mr Bemba’s continued detention was not necessary:

JEAN-PIERRE BEMBA

  • Son of famous businessman
  • Former assistant to former Zaire leader Mobutu Sese Seko
  • 1998: Helped by Uganda to former MLC rebel group
  • 2003: Becomes vice-president under peace deal
  • 2006: Loses run-off election to President Joseph Kabila but gets most votes in western DR Congo
  • 2007: Flees after clashes in Kinshasa

Warlord trial gives victims hope

Profile: Jean-Pierre Bemba

Timeline: DR Congo

• To ensure his appearance at his trial

• To ensure he did not hamper court proceedings

• Or to prevent him "from continuing with the commission of the same or related crimes".

The court said hearings to decide which country would take Mr Bemba and to decide on the conditions of his release would be held in the second week of September.

In June, a pre-trial panel of judges found that there was sufficient evidence to establish substantial grounds to believe that Mr Bemba was "criminally responsible" for murders, rapes and pillaging.

Fighters from his Movement for the Liberation of Congo were accused of committing these atrocities when they intervened in the conflict in CAR.

He is to face trial on three counts of war crimes and two of crimes against humanity.

One of his defence lawyers has suggested that the charges may be politically motivated, to remove Mr Bemba from future elections in DR Congo.

He lost a landmark run-off election against President Joseph Kabila in 2006.

He later fled the country after being charged with treason after his bodyguards clashed with the army in 2007.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Clinton appeal on Congo conflict

Congolese troops in Goma, February 2009

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is heading to the Democratic Republic Of Congo, where she will speak out on the country’s deadly civil conflict.

Mrs Clinton is expected to call for an end to rights abuses, including mass rapes reportedly carried out by rebels and government troops.

Violence flared in the country’s mineral-rich east last year, raising fears of a return to civil war.

Mrs Clinton, on a seven-nation tour of Africa, was in Angola earlier.

She urged the oil-rich nation to hold credible elections and also promised US oil firms would give greater help to Angola’s other sectors, such as agriculture.

Basketball philanthropy

On her arrival in the Congolese capital, Kinshasa, Mrs Clinton is set to visit a newly-built hospital.

Dikembe Mutombo

The BBC’s East Africa correspondent Will Ross says the modern facility is in stark contrast to the rest of the country’s dilapidated health system.

But the hospital was not built by the government – its construction was paid for by Dikembe Mutombo, a Congolese basketball star who made his name in the US.

On Tuesday Mrs Clinton will meet President Joseph Kabila in the eastern town of Goma, where the focus will be on ending human rights atrocities including mass rape.

CLINTON’S AFRICAN TOUR

  • Kenya
  • South Africa
  • Nigeria
  • Angola
  • Liberia
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Cape Verde

Clinton helps South Africa bloom

Send us your comments

Our correspondent says the US and the rest of the international community realise that if stability can be brought to DR Congo it could have a positive impact on a vast swathe of Africa.

The country borders eight other nations, and its conflicts have frequently spilled over its borders.

The US is a major aid donor and has helped the country in some of its recent successes like the elections of 2006 and the thawing of relations with Rwanda.

Mrs Clinton has already visited South Africa and Kenya as part of the trip – her longest foreign tour since taking office.

She is also due to visit Nigeria, Liberia and Cape Verde.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Mandela meeting inspires Clinton

Hillary Clinton meets Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg, 7 August 2009

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said she felt inspired by her meeting with former South African President Nelson Mandela.

The meeting at his home in Johannesburg came on the second leg of her tour of Africa.

Mrs Clinton hailed Mr Mandela for the personal discipline he showed when he fought South Africa’s apartheid system.

She was shown handwritten copies of Mr Mandela’s letters from his time as a political prisoner.

Mrs Clinton was also shown his membership card of the Methodist Church, a denomination to which she also belongs.

Referring to these documents, she said: "It of course inspires in me an even greater admiration for his public work but an even greater affection for the man.

"The discipline that he brought to a life filled with so many great achievements, not only for him personally but for South Africa and the world."

Relations between the US and South Africa were warm during the 1990s under President Mandela and Mrs Clinton’s husband Bill Clinton, the then US president, says the BBC’s Jonah Fisher in Johannesburg.

A commission was established to prioritise areas of cooperation, but when Mr Clinton left the White House this was quietly forgotten, our correspondent says.

South African officials hope that the visit by Mrs Clinton will signal a new period of cooperation to support the already strong business links between the two countries, he adds.

‘Working together’

Earlier, Mrs Clinton met South African International Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane and said the US and South Africa were "working together" to bring about reform in Zimbabwe.

CLINTON’S AFRICAN TOUR

  • Kenya
  • South Africa
  • Nigeria
  • Angola
  • Liberia
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Cape Verde

Send us your comments

"We’re working together to realise the vision of a free, democratic and prosperous Zimbabwe," Mrs Clinton said in a joint news conference with Ms Nkoana-Mashabane.

"We’re going to be closely consulting as to how best to deal with what is a very difficult situation for South Africa and for the United States, but mostly for the people of Zimbabwe."

In the coming days, Mrs Clinton will meet South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma, when she is likely again to address the situation in Zimbabwe, as well as discussing business and health.

Zimbabwe’s economy has improved in recent months but the US is concerned that many of the political and social reforms promised by President Robert Mugabe following the power-sharing agreement with Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai have not yet been implemented.

In their meeting on Saturday, Mrs Clinton is expected to ask Mr Zuma to use his influence to combat what she has called the "negative effects" of Mr Mugabe’s presidency.

Earlier, Ms Nkoana-Mashabane said she believed the Obama administration would work alongside the African Union in helping to bring peace to parts of Africa.

"We see this administration and the government of the USA as a strategic partner on the political front, as we work with them to look at the mechanisms to resolve areas of conflict working together with the African Union," she said.

Mrs Clinton is also due to meet Deputy-President Kgalema Motlanthe.

She will also attend a conference with Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi before attending National Women’s Day events in the capital, Pretoria.

African potential

Mrs Clinton began her seven-nation African tour in Kenya on Wednesday, where she held talks in Nairobi with Kenya’s president and prime minister.

Addressing African leaders at an economic summit, Mrs Clinton said the continent had "enormous potential for progress".

But she stressed that harnessing that potential would require democracy and good governance.

Before Mrs Clinton arrived in Kenya, the US embassy in Nairobi had issued a statement scolding Kenya for its decision not to set up a local court to seek justice for the victims of the deadly clashes which followed the 2007 election.

On Thursday, Mrs Clinton met the Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed in the Kenyan capital.

She offered to increase US support for his unity government and to "take action" against neighbouring Eritrea if it did not stop supporting militants in Somalia.

Eritrea denies supporting Somalia’s al-Shabab militants, who are trying to overthrow Somalia’s government.

The Eritrean Information Minister Ali Abdu told the BBC Mrs Clinton’s comments were "very disappointing" and that the White House had "failed to learn mistakes of the previous US administration".

Mrs Clinton’s 11-day trip will take her to Angola on Sunday before she heads to Nigeria, Liberia, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Cape Verde.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Clinton tour reaches South Africa

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and South African Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane at the airport in Johannesburg (06 August 2009)

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in South Africa on the second leg of her 11-day tour of the continent.

Mrs Clinton will hold meetings with her South African counterpart and with former President Nelson Mandela on the first of three days in the country.

Talks will focus on business and on HIV/Aids, which affects nearly 6 million South Africans.

In the coming days she will meet President Jacob Zuma, for talks likely to include the situation in Zimbabwe.

Correspondents say Mrs Clinton will ask Mr Zuma to use his influence to combat what she has called "negative effects of the continuing presidency of President [Robert] Mugabe" in Zimbabwe.

Relations between the US and South Africa were warm during the 1990s under Presidents Mandela and Bill Clinton, says the BBC’s Jonah Fisher in Johannesburg.

A commission was established to prioritise areas of co-operation but when Mr Clinton left the White House this was quietly forgotten.

South African officials hope that the visit by Mrs Clinton, the former US president’s wife, will signal a new period of cooperation, says our correspondent.

On Friday morning, Mrs Clinton is holding talks with South African Foreign Minister Nkoana-Mashabane and Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe.

Later, she will meet Mr Mandela, South Africa’s first black president, and attend a conference with Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi before travelling to the South African capital Pretoria for National Women’s Day events.

African potential

Mrs Clinton began her seven-nation African tour in Kenya on Wednesday where she held talks in Nairobi with Kenya’s president and prime minister.

CLINTON’S AFRICAN TOUR

  • Kenya
  • South Africa
  • Nigeria
  • Angola
  • Liberia
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Cape Verde

Send us your comments

Addressing African leaders at an economic summit, Mrs Clinton said the continent had "enormous potential for progress".

But she stressed that harnessing that potential would require democracy and good governance.

Before Mrs Clinton arrived in Kenya, the US embassy in Nairobi had issued a statement scolding Kenya for its decision not to set up a local court to seek justice for the victims of the deadly clashes which followed the 2007 election.

On Thursday, Mrs Clinton met the Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed in the Kenyan capital.

She offered to increase US support for his unity government and to "take action" against neighbouring Eritrea if it does not stop supporting militants in Somalia.

Eritrea denies supporting Somalia’s al-Shabab militants, who are trying to overthrow Somalia’s government.

During her 11-day trip Mrs Clinton will also visited South Africa, Nigeria, Angola, Liberia, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Cape Verde.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘New era’ for DR Congo and Rwanda

FDLR militiamen in the Democratic Republic of Congo

The leaders of Rwanda and Democratic Republic of Congo have pledged to boost economic and security ties, hailing an "all new era" after a rare meeting.

The talks took place 13 years after the neighbours broke diplomatic relations.

"It is the first giant step forward," Congo’s President Joseph Kabila told reporters after the meeting near Goma.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame told his Congolese counterpart that Rwanda would never be a base for militias that could destabilise Congo.

They also agreed to develop projects to exploit natural gas reserves in Lake Kivu, which lies between the two countries, and to revive joint commissions that have lain dormant for years.

The meeting comes a month after both sides appointed ambassadors to their respective capitals and has been seen as a further sign of improving relations between the countries.

Military co-operation

In January, the two countries agreed to take joint action against the Hutu FDLR rebels in Congo.

Map

Some of the FDLR leaders are accused of taking part in the 1994 Rwandan genocide, before they fled to DR Congo.

The Rwandan forces have also arrested Congolese Tutsi rebel leader Laurent Nkunda, who is wanted in Congo, but has so far refused to extradite him over fears he may be executed.

But Mr Kagame sought to allay Congolese fears at the talks.

"I can give a very firm assurance that neither Laurent Nkunda nor [his group] the CNDP can base in Rwanda to cause any discomfort… or affect the stability created in DRC or between DRC and Rwanda," he said.

The two leaders are due to meet again in Kinshasa in October or November.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Scientists find new strain of HIV

Gorilla

Gorillas have been found, for the first time, to be a source of HIV.

Previous research had shown the HIV-1 strain, the main source of human infections, with 33m cases worldwide, originated from a virus in chimpanzees.

But researchers have now discovered an HIV infection in a Cameroonian woman which is clearly linked to a gorilla strain, Nature Medicine reports.

HIV originated from a similar virus in chimpanzees called Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV).

"This demonstrates that HIV evolution is an ongoing process"

Dr David Robertson, researcher

Although HIV/Aids was first recognised by scientists in the 1980s, it is thought it first entered the human population early in the twentieth century in the region of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The virus probably originally jumped into humans after people came into contact with infected bush meat.

SIV viruses have been reported in other primates, including gorillas.

Unusual case

French doctors treating the 62-year-old Cameroonian woman who was living in Paris said they initially spotted some discrepancies in routine viral load tests.

Further analysis of the HIV strain she was infected with showed it was more closely related to SIV from gorillas than HIV from humans.

She is the only person known to be infected with the new strain but the researchers expect to find other cases.

Before moving to Paris, she had lived in a semi-urban area of Cameroon and had no contact with gorillas or bush meat, suggesting she caught the virus from someone else who was carrying the gorilla strain.

Analysis of the virus in the laboratory have confirmed that it can replicate in human cells.

Co-author Dr David Robertson, from the University of Manchester, said it was the first definitive transfer of HIV seen from a source other than a chimpanzee, and highlighted the need to monitor for the emergence of new strains.

"This demonstrates that HIV evolution is an ongoing process.

"The virus can jump from species to species, from primate to primate, and that includes us; pathogens have been with us for millions of years and routinely switch host species."

He added that the fact the patient had been diagnosed in France showed how human mobility can rapidly transfer a virus from one area of the world to another.

Professor Paul Sharp, from the University of Edinburgh, said the virus probably initially transferred from chimpanzees to gorillas.

He said the latest finding was interesting but perhaps not surprising.

"The medical implication is that, because this virus is not very closely related to the other three HIV-1 groups, it is not detected by conventional tests.

"So the virus could be cryptically spreading in the population."

However, he said that he would guess it would not spread widely and become a major problem.

"Although the patient with this virus was not ill, there is no reason to believe that it will not lead to Aids," he added. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Todd Moss: What can Africa Hope for During Clinton Visit?

Clinton, in choosing the largest economies and the continent’s most influential capitals, is likely to highlight more traditional US economic and security interests than Obama did on his Ghana trip.

Clinton to go on tour of Africa

Hillary Clinton

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is to tour seven African countries, starting on 5 August.

The visit is to highlight President Barack Obama’s commitment to making Africa a US foreign policy priority.

While in Africa, Mrs Clinton is set to speak at the Africa Trade and Economic Cooperation Forum (AGOA) in Kenya.

Her office in Washington says this is the earliest in any US administration that both the US president and secretary of state have visited Africa.

Global hunger and agricultural issues will also feature highly in her discussions with African leaders.

Kenya is her first stop, where she is set to address the AGOA forum on new approaches to development, investment and broad-based economic growth.

Kenya is also the birthplace of the US president’s father.

Mr Obama visited Ghana earlier this month – his first visit to sub-Saharan Africa since being elected president.

Mrs Clinton will also visit South Africa, Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria, Liberia, and Cape Verde.

She will also meet Somalia’s President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, president of Somalia, whose forces are battling Islamist insurgents.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

African lake gas poses threat to millions

Trapped methane and carbon dioxide could be set loose by a quake or landslide, say scientists

More than two million people living on the banks of Lake Kivu in central Africa are at risk of being asphyxiated by gases building up beneath its surface, scientists have warned.

It is estimated that the lake, which straddles the borders of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda, now contains 300 cubic kilometres of carbon dioxide and 60 cubic kilometres of methane that have bubbled into the Kivu from volcanic vents. The gases are trapped in layers 80 metres below the lake’s surface by the intense water pressures there. However, researchers have warned that geological or volcanic events could disturb these waters and release the gases.

The impact would be devastating, as was demonstrated on 21 August 1986 at Lake Nyos in Cameroon, in West Africa. Its waters were saturated with carbon dioxide and a major disturbance – most probably a landslide – caused a huge cloud of carbon dioxide to bubble up from its depths and to pour down the valleys that lead from the crater lake.

Carbon dioxide is denser than air, so that the 50mph cloud hugged the ground and smothered everything in its path. Some 1,700 people were suffocated.

“The lake was essentially like a bottle of beer that had been shaken up,” said Professor George Kling, of the department of ecology and evolutionary biology at Michigan University. “When you opened it, carbon dioxide bubbled up, and the beer frothed over. A glassful is OK. A lakeful is deadly.”

Kling has since turned his attention to Lake Kivu, which is more than 3,000 times the size of Nyos and contains more than 350 times as much gas. More worrying is the fact that the shores of Kivu are much more heavily populated. About two million people live there, including the 250,000 citizens of the city of Goma.

Mount Nyiragongo, near Goma, erupted in 2002 and lava streamed from it into Lake Kivu for several days. On this occasion there was no disturbance of the lake’s deep layers of gas and no deadly outpouring of carbon dioxide or methane. However, Kling has warned – in the journal Nature this month – that in the event of another eruption the region may not be so lucky again.

Indeed, the impact would dwarf the disaster that struck Nyos. “Kivu is basically the nasty big brother of Nyos,” Kling told Nature.

The source of Kivu’s problems stems from carbon dioxide that has bubbled up through the lake bed from molten rocks below. The region – in Africa’s Great Rift Valley – is a centre of volcanic activity. In addition, some of this carbon dioxide has been converted by bacteria in the lake into methane. Hence the accumulation of both gases.

According to studies by researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, there was a 10% rise in carbon dioxide concentration, and a 15-20% increase in methane concentration in Kivu between 1974 and 2004. At the same time, plankton fossils on the lake’s bed have revealed several massive bouts of biological extinctions in Kivu over thousands of years. However, it is impossible to say if a new one is imminent, researchers told Nature.

At the same time, engineers are trying to tap Kivu’s rich supplies of methane – by lowering pipes from floating platforms down to its holding layers and siphoning off the gas. This could then be burnt and used as a source of industrial and domestic energy.

Several projects have been established, though only one is currently generating electricity – albeit sporadically – for the Rwandan grid. Another platform sank last year shortly before it was scheduled to begin production.

Tapping Kivu’s methane could, theoretically, reduce the risk of a deadly eruption, say engineers. However, scientists have also warned that tampering with the lake’s gases also carries a risk of triggering a disaster.

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