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Posts Tagged ‘Zambia’

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Some ivory sales are a good idea. This one isn’t

IN 1989 the signatories to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) agreed to ban the ivory trade, and banned it has remained. Except, that is, for when CITES chooses to allow it—as it has done now and then since 1997, when specific countries have some well-sourced ivory to get rid of. Most recently, in 2008, South Africa, Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe were allowed to make such sales to China and Japan. Now, as the triennial CITES meeting gets under way in Doha, both Tanzania and Zambia say they want to do something similar.

Those in favour of such sales (most notably, the countries which seek to make them) say they allow countries to benefit from having elephants, and help to finance elephant conservation and protection. Those against them (some conservation charities and some academics in the field) argue that any sale of ivory will lead to an increase in poaching by stimulating demand, and that little of the money raised actually goes to elephants. …

Zambia wary of another mauling

Zambia coach Herve Renard hopes his players have short memories as they prepare to face Cameroon in the Africa Cup of Nations today.   After making a losing start to the previous tournament in Ghana two years ago, the Indomitable Lions roared back with a 5-1 win against the Chipolopolo (CopperZambia coach Herve Renard hopes his players have short memories as they prepare to face Cameroon in the Africa Cup of Nations today. After making a losing start to the previous tournament in Ghana two years ago, the Indomitable Lions roared back with a 5-1 win against the Chipolopolo (Copper

Singapore firm Nava Bharat takes 65% of Zambia coal mine for $36.5m

Singapore’s Nava Bharat has taken over the running of Zambia’s Maamba Collieries, a key coal supplier to Zambia’s copper mines, and signed an agreement to build a 300-megawatt thermal power plant.

Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane said Nava Bharat, which signed an agreement with Zambia, Africa’s largest copper producer, would pay US$26 million ($36.5 million) for a 65% stake in Maamba Collieries while 35% of the shares would be retained by the state-run ZCCM-IH.

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Hard road

By Brian Hungwe
Harare

Human smugglers are running a complex multi-million dollar network, fleecing distressed Somalis seeking a way out of their war-torn country and desperate Ethiopians caught up in vicious cycles of hunger, floods and political repression.

Trafficked person

Thousands of people leave their countries every year, trekking thousands of miles through eight countries from the Horn of Africa, via East Africa down to South Africa.

Bribes oil their journeys across the region by air, overland and sea.

And immigration and police are complicit. The state of the airports and the corruption that goes on there mirrors the body politic of the countries involved. And this has security implications for the countries involved.

"The next five to 10 years, Somalia will have nobody there"

Ismail, Somali truck driver in Malawi

In a recent report on smuggling in the region, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) noted that "guardians of national border integrity… are deeply compromised, creating a threat to national security".

It says their complicity is keeping the smuggling business afloat and that they "should be considered part of the illegal and abusive enterprise" where "cupidity appears to be the foremost and only visible motivation".

Huge sums

IOM’s Tal Raviv, based in Nairobi, acknowledges that the smuggling ring is "sophisticated."

Street scene in Eastleigh, Kenya

"Tens of thousands of people are able to move from Somalia and Ethiopia, all the way down to South Africa, and they arrive successfully," she said.

"All the borders are porous, it’s just that," points out Mokotedi Mpshe, who heads South Africa’s National Prosecuting Authority.

Mr Mpshe knows the extent to which corruption has permeated his society.

"Some government officials can let you down. We may try to fight human trafficking, but at the same time there may be elements amongst ourselves that are working against us," he said.

Cash-strapped governments can’t match the huge sums smugglers pay immigration and police officers to ease the path of illegal immigrants en route to South Africa.

Expanding business

I found that immigrants pay smugglers on average $1,500 – $2,000 before the journey begins.

map of africa

The IOM also estimates the smuggling business generates annual revenue of about $40m. Along the way the immigrants lose much more to robberies.

And rape and other abuse is common.

Over the years, the flow of Somalis has been growing, and thus, according to the IOM, "providing smugglers an expanding and lucrative business opportunity".

"The next five to 10 years, Somalia will have nobody there," said Ismail, a Somali truck driver living in Malawi.

"There is no peace which is coming, there is nobody who is fighting for Somalia."

Lions and snakes

Salma left Somalia with her son Nasir, 3, six years ago, when she was 23. She left her mother and brother behind, and has no clue where they are.

"Sometimes [smugglers] ask the women to sleep with them. You sleep with them, otherwise they leave you behind"

Salma, Somali migrant

From her flat in Cape Town, South Africa, she says that everyone in Somalia is trying to flee the fighting there.

She says she walked on foot for 24 days during the journey.

In Kenya, Salma met Amina, a smuggler linked into a network that carried her across several countries.

Nairobi’s Eastleigh district is, according to IOM, the smuggling hub of the region.

It is a little Mogadishu in the heart of Nairobi, whose life runs 24 hours, hosting a close-knit Somali community that keeps itself to itself.

Money transfers are done with ease, and anything goes. Vehicles with tinted windows are a common sight, and haulage trucks move goods in and out every hour.

It is here that Salma gave $1,000 to the smuggler, Amina, who accompanied her and a small party of migrants on the first half of their journey.

Police bribed

In Tanzania, six members of the party were arrested.

Salma says the smuggler bribed the police to secure their freedom.

She says they had similar experiences in Zambia and Zimbabwe.

"[Smuggler] paid some money and we came out."

Militiaman in Mogadishu

Six years later, Salma’s journey is still vivid for her, as she recounts how she was terrified of lions and snakes as she trudged through the bush.

"Sometimes [smugglers], they ask the women to sleep with them," Salma remembers.

"You sleep with them, otherwise they leave you behind… they do that."

The IOM’s Tal Raviv confirmed that almost all smuggled women get raped, and her organisation has also received reports of the same thing happening to men.

Salma’s journey was even tougher than usual because she was travelling with a child, so the smugglers told her they could not give her accommodation.

"I was struggling too much," she remembers.

Nasir, now nine, vividly recalls sleeping in the forest, his mother walking long distances, and sometimes going for days without food.

"I never ever, I don’t want to do again that journey."

To listen to Brian Hungwe’s full investigation, tune in to African Perspectiveon the BBC World Service.The program is first broadcast on Saturday 1 August at 1106 GMT. It will be available online from 2106 GMT, for one week.</p


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

Zambia prosecutes editor of Post

Chansa Kabwela, editor of the Post (image from Post website)

An editor at Zambia’s biggest-selling newspaper has been charged with distributing obscene materials relating to a health sector crisis.

The Post sent harrowing images of a woman giving birth in the street to government ministers to highlight the effects of a health sector strike.

In May and June, Zambia’s hospitals and clinics ground to a halt as doctors and nurses went on strike over pay.

An official government spokesman declined to comment on the case.

The trial of the Lusaka-based Post’s female news editor, Chansa Kabwela, is due to start at the beginning of August.

‘Too gruesome to publish’

Pictures of the woman giving birth, to a child which subsequently died, were taken by a family member and handed to the Post.

"Unfortunately the president and his ministers and some of his supporters have chosen to ignore the plight of that woman"

Sam Mujuda
Post deputy editor-in-chief

Nine months pregnant and unable to afford private care, she had gone into labour.

But with her baby emerging feet first, she was turned away from two clinics and then Zambia’s largest hospital.

Sam Mujuda, the Post’s deputy editor-in-chief, described the pictures as "particularly graphic".

"I found these pictures quite gruesome and our decision was that we could not publish these pictures," he said.

"Here was a woman giving birth, it was a breach birth, legs first dangling between the legs of this woman."

The editors’ decision to post copies of the pictures to government ministers to focus their minds on the consequences of the strike did not go down well, the BBC’s Jonah Fisher reports from Zambia.

At a press conference, Zambian President Rupiah Banda condemned the Post for circulating what he called pornography.

Then, this week, the paper’s Ms Kabwela was charged with distributing obscene materials.

"What I see in those pictures is suffering," Sam Mujuda added.

"Suffering of a helpless woman who needed assistance. Unfortunately the president and his ministers and some of his supporters have chosen to ignore the plight of that woman."</p


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

Jake Whitney: Betraying the Tribe: Michela Wrong and the Foundations of African Corruption

Wrong’s new book, It’s Our Turn To Eat: The Story of a Kenyan Whistleblower, confronts the question of African corruption head on and finds there’s plenty of blame to go around.