RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘West African’

Islamist death ‘good for Nigeria’

Human-rights activists have voiced concern over the death of the leader of an Islamic sect in Nigerian police custody, calling it "unlawful" killing.

Nigerian government officials said Mohammed Yusuf, 39, was shot while trying to escape. His capture by police had been announced just hours earlier.

His group is blamed for days of unrest that has left hundreds of people dead.

The Boko Haram group wants to overthrow the Nigerian government and impose a strict version of Islamic law.

Mr Yusuf was held and later shot in the north-eastern city of Maiduguri.

A BBC reporter in the city was among journalists shown two films, one apparently showing Mr Yusuf making a confession; the other showing what appeared to be his body, riddled with bullets.

A Nigerian police officer points at a corpse in the northern city of Maiduguri on Wednesday

"Mohammed Yusuf was killed by security forces in a shootout while trying to escape," the regional police assistant inspector-general, Moses Anegbode, told Nigerian television.

A spokesman for the state governor was also quoted as saying that Mr Yusuf had been trying to escape.

Troops had stormed Boko Haram’s stronghold on Wednesday night, killing many of the militants and forcing others to flee.

Mr Yusuf was arrested earlier on Thursday, after reportedly being found hiding in a goat pen at his parents-in-law’s house.

‘Gun battles’

Staff at Human Rights Watch said there should be an immediate investigation into the case.

"The extrajudicial killing of Mr Yusuf in police custody is a shocking example of the brazen contempt by the Nigerian police for the rule of law," said Human Rights Watch’s Eric Guttschuss.

Another Human Rights Watch researcher, Corinne Dufka, told AP news agency: "The Nigerian authorities must act immediately to investigate and hold to account all those responsible for this unlawful killing and any others associated with the recent violence in northern Nigeria."

The violence began on Sunday night in Bauchi state, before spreading to other towns and cities in the northeast of the West African nation.

Nigeria’s ‘Taliban’ enigma

Eyewitness: Nigeria attacks

Fear and tension after attack

Nigerian attacks: Your reaction

map

Crowds of militants tried to storm government buildings and the city’s police headquarters, but dozens of them were shot dead by security forces.

Several days of gun battles between militants and Nigerian security forces ensued, culminating in the assault on the militant’s stronghold.

It is thought more than 300 people have died in the violence – some estimates say 600, although there has been no official confirmation.

The Red Cross said about 3,500 people had fled the fighting and were being housed in their camp.

Witnesses and human rights groups have accused the military of excessive violence in quelling the militants, but the army says it used a minimal amount of force.

Police say Mr Yusuf was a preacher from Yobe state, who had four wives and 12 children.

They described him as a inspirational character.

His sect, Boko Haram, is against Western education. It believes Nigeria’s government is being corrupted by Western ideas and wants to see Islamic law imposed across Nigeria.

Sharia law is in place across northern Nigeria, but there is no history of al-Qaeda-linked violence.

The country’s 150 million people are split almost equally between Muslims in the north and Christians in the south.


Are you in Nigeria Have you been affected by the violence Send us your comments.


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

Cable fault cuts off West Africa

Workers placing a hi-res cable

Large parts of West Africa are struggling to get back online following damage to an undersea cable.

The fault has caused severe problems in Benin, Togo, Niger and Nigeria.

The blackout is thought to have been caused by damage to the SAT-3 cable which runs from Portugal and Spain to South Africa, via West Africa.

Around 70% of Nigeria’s bandwidth was cut, causing severe problems for its banking sector, government and mobile phone networks.

"SAT-3 is currently the only fibre optic cable serving West Africa," explained Ladi Okuneye, chief marketing officer of Suburban Telecoms, which provides the majority of Nigeria’s bandwidth.

"So all West African countries have to use it."

Companies were being forced to use alternatives – such as using satellite links – to maintain connections to the rest of the world, he said.

Telkom South Africa, one of the shareholders of SAT-3, has not said what caused the problems but said it was aware of "a cable fault on the Benin branch that is being investigated".

The 15,000km (9,300mile) SAT-3 cable lands in eight West African countries as it winds its way between Europe and South Africa.

"The rest of the system is unaffected by this fault," a Telkom South Africa representative said.

Nigeria has been badly hit because around 70% of its bandwidth is routed through neighbouring Benin.

The network, run by Suburban Telecom, was set up to bypass Nigeria’s principal telecoms operator Nitel which runs the SAT-3 branch cable which lands in Nigeria.

The SAT-3 consortium is in the process of sending a ship from Cape Town in South Africa to the area to investigate the fault.

Mr Okuneye said that by the time the relevant paperwork was done, it was likely to be "two weeks" before the ship arrived off the coast.

Meanwhile, Benin has been able to reroute its net traffic through neighbouring countries to get back online.

Mr Okuneye said his company was hoping to do the same but said the process would be slower because its bandwidth requirements were so much larger than those of the small republic.

Togo and Niger, which are not part of the SAT-3 consortium, remain offline.


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

‘Gift of the gab’

Charles Taylor in 1990, 1997 and 2009

In our series of weekly viewpoints from African journalists, former BBC editor and Ghanaian minister Elizabeth Ohene, relives her unforgettable encounters with Charles Taylor, the former Liberian president currently defending himself against war crimes charges.

Not much had changed. It was the same self-assured, flamboyant performer. I must confess it gave me quite a start to hear that voice on television say: Dr Charles Ghankay Taylor.

The memories came flooding in… The Charles Taylor story is well known, so where do I start with my Charles Taylor story

Boxing Day, 1989. The day after Christmas Day, Boxing Day is usually a slow day in newsrooms, and the four of us who were at work in the BBC’s Focus on Africa office that Boxing Day were probably cursing our luck that we were at work when most other people were nursing their Christmas hangovers at home.

The phone rang and the voice at the end said he was Charles Taylor, he had launched an invasion into Liberia to throw out the head of state, Master Sergeant Samuel Kanyon Doe.

‘No better than a murderer’

I do not remember if there were any arguments among us about whether we should give him the exposure. But that is not the point today and as the old cliche goes, the rest is history.

A child soldier in Charles Taylor's army, 1990

He was interviewed and the Liberian rebel war was introduced to the world – and with it a certain notoriety for the programme.

As time went by and Focus on Africa continued with what was to become a daily chronicle of the war, the internal arguments and agonising did take place in the office.

But hey, the man made great radio. Gift of the gab – if ever anyone had it, that was Charles Taylor. Probably the most famous of the verbal sparring between editor Robin White and Charles Taylor went something like this…

Robin White: "Mr Taylor, some people think you are not much better than a murderer."

Charles Taylor: (guffaws) "Robin, Jesus Christ was accused of being a murderer in his time."

Okay, I know Jesus Christ was accused of many things in his time but I cannot recall him being accused of murder; all the same you get the drift and must concede it made riveting radio.

‘He killed my ma’

Fast-forward to 1997 and I am in Liberia to cover the elections that would eventually make Charles Taylor president.

UN troops confront a Sierra Leone militiaman, 2000

My abiding memories of that assignment and the face-to-face encounters with Charles Taylor must surely be the chant of his youthful supporters.

There were thousands of them, all clad in yellow Taylor T-shirts and they would run up and down the streets of Monrovia chanting: "He killed my ma, he killed my pa, I’ll vote for him."

When I interviewed him, he brought up the matter of the chant.

"Have you heard them" he asked. "They mean it, you know, and they love me." And indeed they voted for him, and he became president.

Did he make up that chant himself, as some suggested I tackled him on that and as I recall it he simply laughed, but again you must admit he can put words together to make good radio.

Reluctant dinner guest

Fast-forward again to the year 2002 and I am a minister of state in Ghana when a then "under-pressure-to-step-down" President Taylor arrives for a summit of the West African bloc Ecowas, and I am asked to be his ministerial escort.

CHARLES TAYLOR CHARGES

  • Violation of humanitarian law: Conscripting child soldiers
  • Crimes against humanity: Terrorising civilians, murder, rape, sexual slavery, enslavement
  • War crimes: "Violence to life", cruel treatment (including hacking off limbs), pillage

Charles Taylor denies cannibalism

Taylor defiant as testimony begins

Preacher, warlord, president

BBC map

I am afraid the abiding memory of that encounter was the last evening of the summit when Ghanaian President John Kufuor hosted a dinner at the hotel in which all the visiting presidents were staying.

I arrived to take Charles Taylor to the dinner at the seafront of the hotel.

He was reluctant to go and I could not immediately work out what the problem was because he would not say. I managed to get him out of his room, we walked for a few yards and could see ahead of us the dinner laid out and the guests.

He stopped, and have I mentioned that he was surrounded all the time by four hefty bodyguards We never made it to the dinner – he did not feel safe.

Not even the presence of all the other presidents could convince Mr Taylor it was safe to go and eat in an outdoor setting; he looked and acted like a hunted man. He ended up with room service for his dinner that night and I cannot remember any great witty remarks.

He will doubtless keep the courtroom in The Hague spellbound with his oratory and choice phrases. I shall be watching carefully to see if the judges are also mesmerised by his performance.

I wonder whether that macabre chant will be resurrected, this time ending with the words Taylor used the day he was forced out of Liberia: He killed my ma, he killed my pa… and he will be back.


How do you remember Charles Taylor’s rule Are you a Liberian who lived under his Presidency Did you ever meet Mr Taylor in person Send us your comments.

<p


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

Modiba: ‘AfroBlues’ Performance Connects Two Continents On One Stage

Mixing musical cultures is easy. Doing it well is an entirely different matter. The Lincoln Center’s “Afro Blues in the 21st Century” provides valuable insight not only into what works, but also what does not.

Niger leader defiant on vote plan

Anti-Tandja Niger expats in Ivory Coast, July 2009

Niger’s president has said he will not bow to foreign pressure to abandon his attempt to hold a referendum on whether he can serve a third term in office.

Mamadou Tandja told state TV the threat of sanctions would not deter him from doing what was right for the people.

On Tuesday he met Un and African envoys who said they were "deeply concerned" over his attempt to remain in power.

A court has ruled that a general strike called by the opposition is illegal and it is not clear if it will go ahead.

The EU has already suspended some aid to the uranium-rich nation.

The West African regional body, Ecowas, has threatened Niger with sanctions or suspension if Mr Tandja goes ahead with the referendum, scheduled for 4 August.

Large-scale protests

In a televised address, the president said he did not come to power to "serve international opinion".

"I won’t let anyone prevent me from achieving a useful goal for the people of Niger," he said.

map

In recent weeks Mr Tandja, 71, has dissolved parliament and abolished the Constitutional Court after both institutions opposed his proposed referendum.

The proposals have sparked large-scale protests in the capital, Niamey, and the opposition has accused him of staging a coup.

Mr Tandja was first elected in 1999, and then again five years later.

He had previously promised to quit in December this year, a month after presidential elections are due to be held.

But the president’s supporters argue he should be allowed a third term, saying he has reduced poverty in the country in the 10 years he has been in power.</p


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

Joe Craven & Sam Bevan Album

Joe Craven & Sam Bevan collaborate on new CD

Foakee – OUT NOW


Joe Craven

When you take a blues, rock, folk, whirled music multi-instrumentalist and a classically trained pianist/jazz trained bassist and put them together to have their way with traditional American folk songs, you can get something like the Joe Craven/Sam Bevan collaboration called Foakee.

Gospel, blues, Appalachian, Cuban, West African, hip-hop, Brazilian and jazz influences are all combined with sound samples, and looping technology to create beats from mouth, found objects and conventional acoustic on this album. The fun, innovative tribute to the old and the new, on Foakee, creates a fresh cocktail of sound stretching the boundaries of musical style while paying tribute to and forwarding evolving musical traditions.

Joe Craven is a madman with anything that has strings attached or not: violin, mandolin, tin can, bedpan, cookie tin, tenor guitar, mouth bow, banjo, berimbau, balalaika, boot ‘n lace, animal bones, squeeze toys, cake pans, waste cans, umbrella stands, martini shakers, and so on. Mandolin Magazine lauded Joe as, “One of the most daringly inventive musicians working today.” As an educator, former museum curator, visual artist, actor/storyteller and festival emcee, Joe plays all kinds of music and he has made it with all kinds of artists ranging from jazz violinist Stephane Grappelli to Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia to banjo player Alison Brown to The Persuasions.

When it comes to Sam Bevan, Guitar World’s Bass Guitar Magazine says, “Bay Area jazzman Bevan is a bassist for all occasions…” Sam’s own recordings showcase not only his chops but his composing and arrangement abilities as well. Sam is a first call bassist, having played and/or recorded with a variety of artists including Roswell Rudd, David Grisman, Geoff Muldaur and more.

Foakee Track List

1. Dig a Little Deeper in the Well

2. Julianne

3. Little Sadie

4. The Leather Britches of Hackensack

5. Nobody’s Fault but Mine

6. Brown’s Ferry Blues

7. Sittin’ On Top of the World

8. Intro to Shady Grove

9. Shady Grove

10. Bright Sunny South

11. Wayfaring Stranger – Lagrimas Negras

12. Black Jack Davey

13. Cluck ‘ol Hen


Why homosexual men fail to access vital services despite being high HIV risk group

A review written by University of Oxford experts highlights the fact that despite being a high risk group for HIV infection, homosexual men often fail to access vital services because of religious, political and social stigma.
Dr Adrian D Smith writes in the review that the HIV/AIDS community needs to take vital steps to address [...]

World’’s deserts getting greener despite global warming

Contrary to the assumption that global warming would cause an expansion of the world’’s deserts, some scientists are predicting that water and life may slowly reclaim these arid places.
According to a report by BBC News, the evidence is limited and definitive conclusions are impossible to reach, but recent satellite pictures of North Africa seem to [...]

Green deserts

Abu Minqar oasis, Sahara desert

By Ayisha Yahya
BBC, World Service

It has been assumed that global warming would cause an expansion of the world’s deserts, but now some scientists are predicting a contrary scenario in which water and life slowly reclaim these arid places.

They think vast, dry regions like the Sahara might soon begin shrinking.

The evidence is limited and definitive conclusions are impossible to reach but recent satellite pictures of North Africa seem to show areas of the Sahara in retreat.

It could be that an increase in rainfall has caused this effect.

Farouk el-Baz, director of the Centre for Remote Sensing at Boston University, believes the Sahara is experiencing a shift from dryer to wetter conditions.

map

"It’s not greening yet. But the desert expands and shrinks in relation to the amount of energy that is received by the Earth from the Sun, and this over many thousands of years," Mr el-Baz told the BBC World Service.

"The heating of the Earth would result in more evaporation of the oceans, in turn resulting in more rainfall."

But it might be hard to reconcile the view from satellites with the view from the ground.

While experts debate how global warming will affect the poorest continent, people are reacting in their own ways.

Droughts over the preceding decades have had the effect of driving nomadic people and rural farmers into the towns and cities. Such movement of people suggests weather patterns are becoming dryer and harsher.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned recently that rising global temperatures could cut West African agricultural production by up to 50% by the year 2020.

But satellite images from the last 15 years do seem to show a recovery of vegetation in the Southern Sahara, although the Sahel Belt, the semi-arid tropical savannah to the south of the desert, remains fragile.

The fragility of the Sahel may have been exacerbated by the cutting of trees, poor land management and subsequent erosion of soil.

Namibia

The broader picture is reinforced by studies carried out in the Namib Desert in Namibia.

"For the last few years there has been higher than average rainfall"

Mary Seely
Gobabeb research centre

The Kuiseb river in flood in Namibia

This is a region with an average rainfall of just 12 millimetres per year – what scientists call "hyper-arid". Scientists have been measuring rainfall here for the last 60 years.

Last year the local research centre, called Gobabeb, measured 80mm of rain.

In the last decade they have seen the local river, a dry bed for most of the year, experience record-high floods. All this has coincided with record-high temperatures.

"Whether this is due to global change or is a trend anyway, it’s hard to distil actually out of the [data] but certainly we’ve had record highs of temperature," said Joh Henschel, director of Gobabeb.

"Three years ago we had the hottest day on record, 47 degrees Celsius."

The mean annual evaporation is several hundred times higher than the actual rainfall. This is an intense environment.

Fluctuation

His colleague Mary Seely agrees.

"Deserts and arid areas always have extremely varied rainfall," she said.

"You would have to look at a record of several hundred years to maybe say that things are getting greener or dryer. For the last few years there has been higher than average rainfall.

Topnaar house, Namibia

"That said, there is even greater variability in the rainfall and the weather patterns than there has been in the past."

Though positioned on the Atlantic coast, the rain that falls on the Namib desert actually comes from the Indian Ocean, having travelled across Africa.

It is therefore hard to explain an increase in rainfall without accepting that higher temperatures globally are causing shifts in established patterns.

The thing these scientists are most keen to work out is what is man-made change and what is natural fluctuation.

Since 1998 the centre has observed a steady but unmistakable trend of rising levels of C02.

They are sure this increase has not been caused locally, since Gobabeb is in a pristine, isolated part of the world with no local sources of pollution.

This is a change that comes about on a global level.

Manufacturing green

Meanwhile, elsewhere on the continent, things are moving at a faster pace.

Global warming may be greening the desert in small, barely measurable ways but, in parts of Egypt, the greening is being advanced in an artificial way, and on an industrial scale.

Egypt has an expanding population and water is becoming an ever more a precious resource.

Waiting to find out if the deserts are greening is not a realistic option.

Remote sensing, radar imagining from space, began in 1981 and showed scientists what was going on under the Saharan sand.

The aquifer, a collection of reservoirs trapped underground between layers of permeable rock, was studied and mapped for the first time.

Tapping into this supply has meant deserts areas can, with skill and judgement, be transformed into farmable land.

Thank to the work of people like Mr el-Baz, the greening of the desert is happening in Egypt in a controlled way.

Out of the newly irrigated desert we now see the commercial growing of oranges, limes and mangoes.

Further, the Egyptian government is actually sponsoring people to settle in the desert to farm, using the water supply they can now tap into and pump out from under the sand.

The programme is part of an ambitious and controversial plan to reclaim 3.4 million acres of desert.

The trend in other parts of the continent may be a migration of people into the cities and away from arid and semi-arid places, but in Egypt, where the desert is undeniably getting greener, the reverse is true.</p


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

Toubab Krewe Release “Fire”: Tour with Earl Smith

Toubab Krewe launches the second wave of summer tour with release of “Fire”
A new single featuring Jamaican legends Lukani, Earl Smith and Leroy Wallace


Toubab Krewe

Fresh from widely praised performances at Rothbury (read our review here), where members of the band joined The Dead on percussion during their headlining July 4th set, Toubab Krewe launches into the second leg of their summer tour with the release of a new single, “Fire.” The collaborative new song was recorded recently at reggae guitar legend Earl Smith‘s front porch home-studio in Kingston, Jamaica and features Lukani (vocals), Smith (guitar) and Leroy “Horsemouth” Wallace (drums).

Toubab Krewe kicks off the tour aboard the first annual Toubab Kruise in New York City on July 15. The band will bring its dance-party inducing fusion of rock ‘n’ roll and West African music to the boat as it sails along the East River, heading through the New York Harbor to the Statue of Liberty.

Special guest Earl Smith will join Toubab Krewe on guitar at all of the upcoming shows through August 1. Perhaps the most sought after guitarist in reggae, Smith has performed and recorded with everyone from Bob Marley, Jimmy Cliff, Peter Tosh and Burning Spear to more recent pop icons like Lauren Hill, Erykah Badu and Joss Stone.

Toubab Krewe plans to spend much of August in the studio recording a new full length album (details TBA).

An extensive fall tour is also in the works, with confirmed dates including the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco (October 8) and the Joshua Tree Music Festival (October 10).

A short video taken of the band’s time in Jamaica during the recording can be seen here:

Upcoming Summer Tour Dates:

07/15/09 Wed The Rocks Off Concert Cruise New York, NY

07/17/09 Fri Festivus for the Restivus (Manifestivus) Cabot, VT

07/18/09 Sat Festivus for the Restivus (Manifestivus) Cabot, VT

07/24/09 Fri Floyd Fest Floyd, VA

07/25/09 Sat Floyd Fest Floyd, VA

07/31/09 Fri Smith’s Olde Bar Atlanta, GA

08/01/09 Sat Smith’s Olde Bar Atlanta, GA

08/07/09 Fri Sweet Pea Festival Bozeman, MT

08/13/09 Thu Camp Barefoot Music Festival Gore, VA

08/14/09 Fri St. Clair Park Greensburg, PA

08/21/09 Fri The Blind Tiger Greensboro, NC

08/22/09 Sat The Blind Tiger Greensboro, NC

09/17/09 Thu Legend’s Music Hall Boone, NC

09/19/09 Sat Exit/In Nashville, TN

09/20/09 Sun Levitt Shell Memphis, TN

09/30/09 Wed Tractor Tavern Seattle, WA

10/08/09 Thu Great American Music Hall San Francisco, CA

10/10/09 Sat Joshua Tree Roots Music Festival Joshua Tree, CA

10/30/09 Fri Neighborhood Theatre Charlotte, NC

01/03/10 Sun Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/04/10 Mon Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/05/10 Tue Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/06/10 Wed Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/07/10 Thu Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

For more on Toubab Krewe see our recent feature/interview here.


Shawn Rubin: My Letter to the President

I was excited to hear you bring to light African grassroots efforts to make change, and I hope you will continue to be an advocate for all struggling African social entrepreneurs.

Taylor tells trial of ‘corruption fight’

Charles Taylor in court 14.7.09

Former Liberian President Charles Taylor is due to continue his defence at a war crimes tribunal in The Hague.

Mr Taylor appeared in the witness box at his trial for the first time on Tuesday, dismissing the charges against him as "lies".

He is accused of having armed and directed rebel groups during the civil war in neighbouring Sierra Leone.

He denies 11 counts, including murder, terrorism, rape and torture, at the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone.

An estimated 500,000 people were killed, mutilated or suffered other atrocities in the 1991-2002 civil war.

Some of the worst crimes were committed by child soldiers who were drugged to desensitise them.

Mr Taylor is the first African leader to be tried by an international court.

‘Deceit and deception’

Testifying on Tuesday for the first time since his trial began more than two years ago, he told the court he had only wanted to bring peace to Liberia’s West African neighbour.

CHARLES TAYLOR CHARGES

  • Violation of humanitarian law: Conscripting child soldiers
  • Crimes against humanity: Terrorising civilians, murder, rape, sexual slavery, enslavement
  • War crimes: Violence to life and cruel treatment (including hacking off limbs) pillage

Preacher, warlord, president

Q&A: Trying Taylor

Taylor’s defiant testimony

Map

He denied being involved in atrocities committed by Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels during the civil war.

"I am not guilty of these charges, not even a minute part of these charges," he said. "This whole case is a case of deceit, deception and lies."

Prosecutors have called 91 witnesses in pressing their case that Mr Taylor provided arms, money and support to Sierra Leone rebels in exchange for diamonds.

The defence says Mr Taylor could not have managed a rebel operation in Sierra Leone while also running affairs of state in Liberia.

Mr Taylor is the first of 249 witnesses the defence has said it may call.

The trial was moved to the Netherlands from Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown, amid fears it could create instability there and in neighbouring Liberia.

A verdict in the case is expected some time in 2010.</p


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

In pictures

Beauty and tragedy on a West African migration to Europe

A once in a lifetime show

Delicate works by artists from Fra Angelico to Leonardo to include loans from the Uffizi in Florence

The British Museum’s collection of Italian Renaissance drawings is so fragile that its masterpieces are exhibited only once in a generation.

Next summer a chance to see these delicate objects will finally come around, as the museum launches an exhibition, in partnership with the Uffizi in Florence, of works on paper by artists from Fra Angelico to Leonardo.

The 100 or so works will span the period 1400-1510 and artists including Jacopo and Gentile Bellini, Botticelli, Filippo Lippi, Mantegna, Michelangelo and Raphael.

About half of the works will come from Florence, and some have never been shown in the UK before. Bringing the drawings from Florence together with those from London, said British Museum director Neil MacGregor, will “together allow a different reading of draughtsmanship from the period. It will allow a new engagement with this part of the Italian Renaissance.”

In typical British Museum style, the message is “only connect”; for the museum will at the same time mount an exhibition of West African sculpture of the same period. Works from the kingdom of Ife – a powerful, cosmopolitan city state in what is now Nigeria that flourished from the 12th to the 15th centuries – will form the focus of an exhibition for the first time outside Africa.

“They are works of absolutely comparable quality [to the Renaissance drawings],” said MacGregor of the strikingly finely worked, naturalistic sculptures.

The exhibitions together form a counterpoint to the blockbuster Moctezuma exhibition, opening this autumn, which will also focus on the early 16th century – this time on the last Aztec emperor before Spanish conquest. MacGregor said Mexican colleagues had been “astonishingly generous” in loans to the exhibition, which include the ceremonial throne-cum-altar of Moctezuma.

Alongside elaborate Aztec skulls, the exhibition will also show a selection of contemporary Mexican skulls created for the Day of the Dead, the festival energetically celebrated in Mexico on 1 November. The British Museum will also celebrate the feast, and, according to MacGregor, “large quantities of sugar skulls, the delicacy of the Day of the Dead, are already on order”.

MacGregor, launching the museum’s annual review, reported on the British Museum’s next big step: its “north-west development”, a 11,000 sq metre exhibition space and conservation centre.

Two-thirds of the funds for the £135m extension are secured, and, according to British Museum chair Niall FitzGerald, the museum is “shovel-ready” to start work on building, pending trustees’ go-ahead and planning permission from Camden council, a decision on which is expected later this month. English Heritage, said a museum spokeswoman, are fully backing the plans for the extension.

The new space, designed by Graham Stirk of Rogers Stirk Harbour & Partners, Sir Richard Rogers’s practice, is planned as a replacement for the reading room in the museum’s Great Court as the venue for large-scale exhibitions such as those recently devoted to Hadrian and Shah Abbas. Permission to use the reading room as a venue for exhibition expires in 2012 and, warned FitzGerald: “If we don’t have another space for our exhibitions that would be a catastrophe.”

The government has pledged £22.5m for the development; about £30m will come from the museum’s reserves and the balance, MacGregor was “hopeful and confident”, is being found from private donors.MacGregor said that a key challenge for the museum was getting its collection out on the road. In the last financial year, 2,500 objects from the museum were seen in other UK locations.

Transporting objects, he said, was “technically safe – the limits are now ones of resources and making sure there are places that can receive them”.

Developing the museum’s online facilities was also crucial. “By the end of this year there will be 2m objects online – well ahead of any major institution in the world,” said MacGregor. “Making available free digital downloads of the highest possible quality is the natural corollary of free entry to the museum.”

It was a year of growth for the institution, with visitor figures for 2008 at 5.93m, making it the most popular visitor attraction in the UK.

A number of important gifts had been made to the museum, and new galleries created for the matchless Percival David collection of Chinese art, which has been lent to the museum in perpetuity. It is, said MacGregor, the most important addition to the museum collection since the Sutton Hoo treasure in 1942.

The world around 1500: connecting the British Museum’s exhibitions

In 1492, Christopher Columbus sails to the Americas.

In 1498, Vasco da Gama reaches India after rounding the Cape of Good Hope.

In 1492, the last Muslim ruler of Granada, Boabdilm, surrenders to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain. In 1499, forced baptisms begin.

In 1502, Moctezuma becomes ruler of the Aztec empire (Aztec mask below); under him it reaches its largest size. In 1519, he and Cortés meet.

By the end of the 15th century, the kingdom of Ife in modern Nigeria begins to give way to Benin as a wealthy west African political and artistic centre.

In the early 16th century Benin sends an ambassador to Portugal; Portuguese missionaries are sent to Benin.

Somewhere between 1503 and 1507, Leonardo paints the Mona Lisa.

In about 1507, Raphael paints St Catherine of Alexandria, now in the National Gallery.

In 1513, Machiavelli writes The Prince.

In 1516, Rafael Perestrello, a cousin of Christopher Columbus, becomes the first European explorer to land on the southern coast of mainland China. The following year, the Portuguese send an expedition to try to set up trade relations with China in Guangzhou.

In the early 16th century, the Mughal empire begins its rise.

In 1503, Henry VII obtains a papal dispensation allowing his son Henry to marry his widowed daughter-in-law, Catherine of Aragon.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Tough love

Barack Obama before leaving Ghana

By Will Ross
BBC News, Ghana

He may only have been in Africa for 21 hours but it was long enough for Barack Obama to send out his inspiring message across the continent – "A New Moment Of Promise," he called it.

He urged Africans to stop laying the blame elsewhere and to take control of their own destiny.

He encouraged the younger generation to catch the "Yes We Can" fever that had assisted his own rise to the White House.

Strengthening democracy from the grassroots requires some brave foot soldiers and Mr Obama singled out the work of civil society groups such as Zimbabwe’s Election Support Network, which struggled to ensure people’s votes counted in the face of a violent state-driven clampdown.

A young girl in Ghana

"Make no mistake: history is on the side of these brave Africans, and not with those who use coups or change constitutions to stay in power. Africa doesn’t need strongmen, it needs strong institutions," Mr Obama stated.

Ghana is a case in point – one of the reasons for Ghana’s successful election late last year was its strong electoral commission.

Along the West African coast the Sierra Leone People’s Party was voted out of power in 2007 amid growing anger at government corruption.

The election worked because the National Electoral Commission, headed by Christiana Thorpe, was strong and did not buckle under pressure to fix the vote.

The strong institutions are certainly lacking in Barack Obama’s African home – Kenya.

When Mwai Kibaki was announced the winner of the 2007 election, the head of the government-appointed electoral commission, Simon Kivuiti, admitted that he did not know for sure if Mr Kibaki had won.

"He said if you want to play ball on the international level you have to play by the international rules"

Kwesi Aning
Kofi Annan Peacekeeping Institute

In quotes: Ghana speech

During his speech Barack Obama did not name and shame leaders – that is not his style.

But his denunciation of Africa’s "strong men" will have made a few leaders squirm in their presidential palaces.

Mr Obama seemed to be adding his voice to the collective despair across West Africa as Niger’s president, Mamadou Tandja, tears up the rule book in an attempt to stay in power.

Cameroon’s Paul Biya, Senegal’s octogenarian President Abdoulaye Wade, Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni and several others have also changed the rules in order to remain in office.

Mutual responsibility

The question is whether those leaders are going to play the blindest bit of attention to the words of an African-American who is far more popular than they are.

They may well have reached for the television remote control and found something less uncomfortable to watch.

Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni

Barack Obama said the partnership between Africa and America must be one of mutual responsibility.

"He threw the ball into our own court and said if you want to play ball on the international level you have to play by the international rules," said Kwesi Aning of the Kofi Annan Peacekeeping Institute.

It will not be easy to change some old, corrupt habits but if Africa plays its part Barack Obama is promising a great deal in return including assistance to boost agriculture, trade and healthcare.

But, in a difficult economic climate, the US may be hard pushed to fulfil some of its promises.

In Uganda, for example, there is mounting concern as funding constraints are forcing health centres to stop enrolling new patients for US-funded anti-retroviral treatment under the President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (PEPFAR) initiative which George Bush started.

Being an African-American means Barack Obama is listened to as a brother in Africa rather than as a condescending visitor.

Whiff of hypocrisy

People agreed with him rather than dismissing him when he hit out at some of the practises holding back the continent.

"No business wants to invest in a place where the government skims 20% off the top, or the head of the Port Authority is corrupt.

"No person wants to live in a society where the rule of law gives way to the rule of brutality and bribery. That is not democracy, that is tyranny and now is the time for it to end," he said.

Inside the conference centre, Ghanaian politicians cheered, applauded and gave a standing ovation. Some smelt hypocrisy there.

"The political leaders were clapping and cheering the speech. But when we plead for an end to the same problems that Obama highlighted we are threatened, abused and sidelined," said Mr Aning.

He commended the speech for being honest, direct and lacking spin but suggests the same cannot be said for some of the politicians who were listening to it.

"You have the power to hold your leaders accountable," Mr Obama said, aiming his message at the youth.

But it can be dangerous trying to stand up and call for better governance.

In March, two Kenyan human rights activists – Kamau Kingara and John Paul Oulo – were gunned down in broad daylight shortly after helping an investigation into extrajudicial killings by the Kenyan police.

"It won’t be easy. It will take time and effort. There will be suffering and setbacks," Mr Obama stated as he called for the continent to take responsibility for its future.</p


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

Guinea on alert for ‘attack plot’

Captain Moussa Dadis Camara (left) talking to General Mamadou Bah Toto Camara

The military government of Guinea says it has put the army on high alert at all border posts after uncovering plans for an attack on the country.

The West African state said armed men were gathering on the borders with Guinea-Bissau and Senegal to the north and Liberia to the south.

An announcement on state-run national radio said drugs cartels were believed to be behind the plans.

Guinea is a key transit point for drugs en route from the Americas to Europe.

When the junta led by Captain Moussa Camara seized power some seven months ago, it made the fight against drugs one of its key priorities.

Several leading suspects have been arrested and are awaiting trial, but the regime must have made powerful enemies in the process, correspondents say.

Map showing Guinea

The BBC’s Alhassan Sillah in the capital, Conakry, says the announcement of the national alert caught most people off guard and many have reacted with trepidation.

The statement, carried on state radio said "well informed sources" had indicated that the attackers were on the payroll of drug cartels.

"The ministry of defence was informed by the security services and other credible sources of the preparation of an armed attack on Guinea from its borders with Guinea-Bissau and the region of Casamance [in Senegal]," it said.

"These sources have also indicated that there are armed men regrouping on the border with Guinea Bissau to the north and the town of Foya to the south on the border with Liberia."

Election pressure

The statement comes as the military government faces increasing pressure from both local political and civil society groups and the international community for it to hold elections.

Captain Camara has said he will stand down after free and fair elections, which he says will take place by the end of 2010.

The African Union suspended Guinea after the coup, which followed the death of long-standing President Lansana Conte. Many Guineans welcomed the coup, seeing it as bringing an end to years of misrule.

Guinea has more than a third of the world’s bauxite reserves, and also has large reserves of gold, diamonds, iron and nickel.

COCAINE TRAFFICKING ROUTES INTO EUROPE VIA WEST AFRICA

  • 1. Most of the world’s supply of cocaine comes from South America. Venezuela is one of the main departure points for illicit drug consignments leaving the region. Drugs are flown or shipped to West Africa in shipping containers, small boats, or private and commercial aircraft

  • 2. West Africa has become a major hub for smuggling South American cocaine into Europe as British and American anti-drug efforts have curtailed the use of traditional smuggling routes

  • 3. In West Africa the drugs are stockpiled and prepared for transport into Europe by South American, European and local drugs gangs
  • 4. The drugs are smuggled to Europe by shipping container, overland, airfreight or on commercial passenger flights using "mules" via West and East Africa.
  • The countries shown are identified in the INCB report. Routes shown are general indications of illicit drug routes. They are not intended to show exact routes.

Source: INCB, Interpol
Map showing smuggling routes from South America to Europe via West and East Africa

Return to the top
</p


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

Obama In Ghana: ‘Africa Not Separate From World Affairs’

ACCRA, Ghana — An American president who has “the blood of Africa within me” praised and scolded the continent of his ancestors Saturday, asserting forces of tyranny and corruption must yield if Africa is to achieve its promise.

“Yes yo…