Search This Blog

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Why Are US Special Operations Forces Deployed in Over 100 Countries?

That’s over 60 percent of the nations on the planet.

   

Abe's Africa visit purely political, says Chinese foreign minister





Wang Yi shakes hands with Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, (Photo/Xinhua)

Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe's visit to Africa has strong political motives and represents Japan's aims to compete with China, says Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi according to Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao.

Wang said during his meeting with Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Ethiopia's minister of health, that China's aid to and cooperation with Ethiopia are completely selfless, adding that China has not competed with or crowded out other countries. China asserts that the international community should cooperate with Africa and help the continent together and does not approve of "certain countries" who try to compete with others for their own interests and offer aid to Africa out of purely political motives, said the minister, in a veiled attack on Abe, going on to say that these narrow-minded countries cannot win the hearts of people in Africa.

Wang began his six-day visit to Ethiopia, Djibouti, Ghana and Senegal on Jan. 6. It has become a custom over the past 24 years for Chinese foreign ministers to visit Africa during their first trip abroad of the year.

The Chinese minister's coincides with Abe's visit to Ethiopia, Mozambique, the Ivory Coast and the Gulf state of Oman over seven days, which started Jan. 8. Abe's trip is aimed at strengthening ties with African countries. He is expected to give a speech about Japan's Africa policy in Ethiopia, talk with Oman's Sultan Qaboos bin Said al Said and sign investment pacts with both countries.

Japan increased its aid to Africa this year and Abe's actions since last year show that the country has been trying to reduce China's influence in Africa, said Zhang Hongming, a researcher of West Asian and African studies with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The Chinese scholar doubts Abe's visit can diminish China's influence in Africa since China began providing aid to Africa in the mid 1990s.

As Japan wants to become a permanent member of the United National Security Council, it is seeking support from Africa, who has a large number of votes. Japan also hopes to diversify its energy sources through cooperation with Africa, which could affect China's resources and market in the continent, said Zhang.

Urgent News: Ethiopia Rejects Egypt Proposal on Nile as Dam Talks Falter







By William Davison and Ahmed Feteha

Ethiopia rejected a proposal that would guarantee Egypt the rights to most of the Nile River’s water, as disagreements cast doubt over future talks about Africa’s biggest hydropower project.
The 6,000-megawatt Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam on Ethiopia’s Blue Nile River, set to be completed in 2017, has raised concern in Cairo that it will reduce the flow of the Nile, which provides almost all of Egypt’s water. The Blue Nile is the main tributary of the Nile.

The $4.2 billion dam 30 kilometers (19 miles) from Sudan’s border will benefit agricultural and power interests in the region and not cause water losses downstream, Ethiopia says. Sudan supports the hydropower project designed to produce electricity for much of East Africa that began in April 2011.

Egyptian officials at a Jan. 4-Jan. 5 meeting that also included representatives from Sudan, introduced a “principles of confidence-building” document asking Ethiopia to “respect” Sudan and Egypt’s water security, said Fekahmed Negash, the head of the Ethiopian Water and Energy Ministry’s Boundary and Transboundary Rivers Affairs Directorate. Discussing the issue would contravene an agreement signed by six Nile countries, he said in a phone interview on Jan. 6.

“We will not negotiate on this issue with any country,” Fekahmed said from Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa. “That is why we say take it to the right platform” that includes other members of the Nile Basin, he said.

1959 Accord

Egypt argues its 1959 agreement with Sudan that gave Egypt the rights to 55.5 billion cubic meters out of a total of 84 billion cubic meters is the governing document on the Nile’s water. The rest of the river’s flow was for Sudan or lost to evaporation. Ethiopia and other upstream nations reject the accord they were not signatories to and say Egypt’s domination of the Nile has unfairly deprived them of a vital resource.

Ethiopia also rejected an Egyptian suggestion to immediately form a panel of neutral experts to adjudicate any disputes arising from planned studies of the dam’s hydrological and environmental impact, Ethiopian Water and Energy Minister Alemayehu Tegenu said. Experts can be hired if they’re needed, he said in an interview Jan. 5 in Khartoum.

Egypt won’t send a delegation to Addis Ababa unless Ethiopia’s government signals its intent to resolve the areas of dispute, Egyptian daily Al-Masry Al-Youm quoted Egyptian Irrigation Minister Mohamed Abdel-Moteleb as saying on Jan. 6.

Talks Impasse

“We have exhausted all opportunities to negotiate with Ethiopia because of the intransigence of Addis Ababa,” Abdel-Moteleb said.

Discussions will “continue,” Ethiopia’s Alemayehu said yesterday on his official Twitter account.
Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan decided on Dec. 9 to form a committee comprising four members from each country to oversee the studies. The initiative was recommended by a panel of international experts who concluded in May that insufficient work had been done on the dam’s downstream impact while the reservoir is filled and during operation.

Ethiopia has repeatedly refused Egyptian requests to pause construction of a key national project.

“There is nothing that will stop it,” Gideon Asfaw, head of Ethiopia’s technical team in Khartoum, said about the dam.

Egypt “has escalatory steps to assert our historic rights to the Nile waters,” Abdel-Moteleb was quoted as saying, without elaborating.

Equitable Principles

A Cooperative Framework Agreement has been signed by Ethiopia and five other Nile nations that adopts principles of “equitable and reasonable” use of waters that do not cause “significant harm” to other states. Once ratified by six legislatures, the accord paves the way for the creation of a Nile River Basin Commission that will manage water rights and development projects on the Nile.

Egypt considers preserving its claimed rights to the Nile a matter of national security and says it needs more than its 1959 share because of its growing population. In June, in a televised meeting with former President Mohamed Mursi, Egyptian opposition politicians discussed tactics to prevent Ethiopia finishing the dam, including the use of force.

“We need 80 billion cubic meters,” Abdel-Moteleb said. “We will not let go of one drop of water.”
-------
To contact the reporters on this story: William Davison in Addis Ababa at wdavison3@bloomberg.net; Ahmed Feteha in Khartoum at afeteha@bloomberg.net


To contact the editor responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net





Source: bloomberg.com

Turkey sacks 350 police officers amid corruption scandal



Firing line: Turkish police are on the other end of a government crackdown, with 350 losing their jobs at midnight. Photo: Reuters

Ankara: The Turkish government has sacked 350 police officers in Ankara, including heads of major departments, amid a vast corruption scandal that has ensnared key allies of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The officers were sacked by a government decree published at midnight and included chiefs of the financial crimes, anti-smuggling, cyber crime and organised crime units, the private Dogan News Agency reported on Tuesday.

The decree also appointed replacements for 250 of the sacked officers, it said.

The move comes as the government is trying to contain the high-level corruption investigation that poses the biggest threat to Mr Erdogan’s 11-year rule.
The inquiry is believed to be linked to simmering tensions between Mr Erdogan’s government and followers of influential Muslim scholar Fethullah Gulen, who lives in exile in the United States.
Gulen followers hold key positions in various government branches including the police and judiciary.

Mr Erdogan has denounced the investigation as a foreign-hatched plot to bring down his government and has responded by sacking dozens of police chiefs across the country since the probe first burst into the open in mid-December.

AFP


Yuusuf Gaydh Oo Loo Magacaabayo Raysal Wasaare Ku Xigeenka Somalia Iyo Jaamac Yare Oo Ku Soo Dhaweeyey Madaarka Xamar

Yuusuf Gaydh Oo Loo Magacaabayo Raysal Wasaare Ku Xigeenka Somalia Iyo Jaamac Yare Oo Ku Soo Dhaweeyey Madaarka Xamar.



Muqdisho - Ilo ku dhawdhaw Madaxweynaha dawlada Xamar Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud (Xasan Culusow) ayaa Haatuf u sheegay in Yuusuf Maxamed Kaahin (Yuusuf Gaydh) oo ah siyaasi dhalasho ahaan ka soo jeeda Somaliland ay xukuumada Somalia u magacaabi doonto jagada Raysal Wasaare ku xigeenka.
Yuusuf Gaydh oo ka tirsanaan jiray Naarlamaankii xukuumadii Imbagaati ayaa sanadkii 2007 ku biiray koox la baxday Baarlamanka Xorta ah kuwaas oo ka dagay caasimada Eriteria ee Asmara halkaas oo ay ku aasaaseen Isbahaysiga dib u Xoraynta Somalia ee ka soo horjeeday xukuumadii Cabdilaahi Yuusuf Madaxweynaha ka ahaa iyo joogitaankii Ciidamada Ethiopia ee gudaha Somalia.
Yuusuf Gaydh oo ka soo horjeeday Madaxbanaanida Somaliland ayaa ku soo noqday Hargeysa 16 February 2008 kadib markii uu codsi cafis ah uu usoo qortay xukuumada Somaliland taas oo uu ka dalbaday in la saamaxo.
Sanadahan dambe, Yuusuf Gaydh waxa uu Ingineer ahaan ugu shaqayn jiray mashruuc biyood samafal ah oo dawlada Imaaraadku ka waday dalka Koonfurta Sudan oo uu ka madax ahaa Ingineer Cabdiraxmaan Cali Ducaale (C/raxmaan Juudi).
Yuusuf Gaydh waxa uu ka dhoofay magaalada Hargeysa saddex cisho ka hor isagoo ku sii jeeda dhinaca caasimada Somalia waxaana madaarka Xamar ku soo dhaweeyey siyaasiga caanka ah General Jaamac Maxamed Qaalib (Jaamac Yare) kaas oo warbixin Qaramada Midoobay ka soo baxday sanadkii hore ay ku tilmaantay inuu hawlo dhinaca sirdoonka ah dawlada Eriteria uga hayo magaalada Muqdisho.
General Jaamac Maxamed Qaalib oo Yuusuf Gaydh ay ku wada jireen Isbahaysiga kor ku xusan ee fadhigiisu Asmara ahaa ayaa 19-kii sanadood ee u dambeeyey intooda badan waxa uu ku sugnaa magaalada Xamar, hase yeeshee labadii sanadood ee u dambeeyey waxa uu dhawrkii biloodba socdaalo gaaban ku imanayey caasimada Somaliland ee Hargeysa oo uu deegaan ahaan ka soo jeedo.
Ilahaasi waxa kale oo ay sheegeen in Jaamac Yare kaambayn adag u galay sidii jagadaa Raysal Wasaare ku xigeenka loogu magacaabi lahaa Yuusuf Gaydh oo ay wadaagaan ku talax-taga mucaaridada madaxbanaanida Somaliland isla markaana in Generalku ka ololeeyey sidii aanay jagadaa u qabteen shakhsiyaad uga faraqabow xaga Somaliland sida Ismaaciil Buubaa iyo Foosiya Yuusuf Xaaji Aadan oo xukuumadii Saacid ee dhacay ka ahayd Raysal Wasaare ku xigeen iyo Wasiir khaarajiga.

Somalia's Regional Administration of Puntland Appoints New President

Lawmakers pick Abdiweli Mohamed Ali to lead semi-autonomous region of Puntland for a second term.

 

 

Left: Abdiweli Mohamed AliElected Puntland President. Right: Abdirahman Mohamed Farole election loser


Somalia's semi-autonomous region of Puntland has chosen Abdiweli Mohamed Ali as president in a vote held in Garowe the regions capital, amid tight security.

Abdiweli unseated the incumbent president Abdirahman Mohamed Farole in a tightly contest run-off poll. Ali is a former prime minister of Somalia under Sheikh Sharif. Ali garnered 33 votes as opposed to Farole's 32.

No candidates secured the required two-thirds majority in the first  and second round of voting. Farole won the first two rounds of voting with comfortable margins.

Eight candidates were eliminated in the first round voting. The whole voting processes was broadcast live on local TVs and radio stations.

Puntland declared itself to be semi-autonomous from Somalia in 1998 as fighting raged through most of the country. Since then the region of about 2.5 million people has had four presidents, all selected by MPs who were in turn selected by clan elders.

The polls were originally set for July last year but were postponed after government said the risk of violence was too great for voting to be held.

Farole accepted the results and thanked "those who worked with him".

Source: Aljaziira

Somaliland set to usher in major port investment

The breakaway state is finalising a huge port investment, boosting its efforts to serve as a trade hub between the African and Arab worlds


Somaliland is finalising a multi-million dollar deal with a leading international operator to develop a port at Berbera, on the Gulf of Aden, bolstering the breakaway nation’s bid to position itself as a export gateway for landlocked Ethiopia, according to an envoy working on the deal.

“After six months of negotiations, an agreement has been put on the table, which is highly exciting, from one of the world’s best port operators,” says Jason McCue, a human rightslawyer who serves as an envoy for the state’s bid for independence, and who is assembling investors to grow the coastal town of Berbera into a $2.5bn logistics hub. “The moment is there for Somaliland.”

Mr McCue declined to comment on the size of the port investment, but says it would constitute the single biggest inflow of foreign direct investment in Somaliland’s 22 year history of de facto autonomy. “We are talking hundreds of millions,” he tells This is Africa. “That port will become a major international port.”

Authorities in the desert state are trying to overhaul crumbling infrastructure as they seek to capitalise on their position as a bridge between Africa and the Middle East. Kuwait recently spent $10m reinvigorating the nation’s two airports, and the government in Hargeisa has plans to develop road networks and an oil pipeline to service the export needs of neighbouring Ethiopia. It hopes that the port at Berbera can compete with Djibouti, Mombasa and Dar es Salaam, where ships can wait weeks to unload their cargo due to bottlenecks

Ethiopia is Africa’s second most populous nation, with 91 million inhabitants, and has annual exports worth almost $1bn, led by coffee and gold.

“We are trying to see how we could get international partners to help us with infrastructure. We want to develop the corridor between Berbera and Ethiopia because that is really the lifeline,” says Somaliland’s foreign minister Mohamed Bihi Yonis. “We are all aiming at Ethiopia and we believe that we could provide support to a third of the population of Ethiopia.”

This kind of large-scale investment may bolster Somaliland’s attempts to gain international recognition. The state unilaterally declared independence when civil war erupted in Somalia in 1991 and is officially seen as an autonomous region rather than a country. But it has held a series of democratic elections, has its own currency, and is a haven of relative refuge from the terrorism and piracy that afflict Mogadishu's government. As well as targeting infrastructure investors, the government has ushered in frontier oil companies like Genel Energy, which are exploring Somaliland’s potentially huge reserves. But like Somalia, the nation is hampered by the fact that it has no access to international financial services.

“There is almost an inevitability occurring [around the independence bid], as Somaliland creates this financial self-sufficiency,” Mr McCue argues. “When big international companies come in, who have immense power in the states where they are from, they are going to demand that their home state pushes for [Somaliland’s] independence, because they are going to want to operate in a normal financial services market.”

Hargeisa’s foreign minister says that “dealing with the rest of the world in terms of investments and development and security” is proof that the region is fulfilling the criteria required of a country. “We believe that we will get recognition soon, because we have done well,” he claims.

But sources close to talks between Somalia and Somaliland tell This is Africa that a new government in Mogadishu shows little indication of changing its stance by recognising the breakaway region’s right to independence.

Somalia has contested oil licenses awarded by Somaliland’s Hargeisa-based government, saying they infringe on old concessions awarded by the federal government before 1991. A draft petroleum bill says the central government alone has the “privilege to distribute natural resources”.

Somaliland could wait a while longer before it gets the recognition it has been hankering after for two decades.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

African Union missing in action in conflicts from Mali to South Sudan



Weak leadership and rivalry between states have hampered African efforts to bring security to the conflict-hit continent



A French soldier patrols Bossangoa, Central African Republic. Foreign troops have struggled to stem sectarian clashes. Photograph: Andreea Câmpeanu/Reuters
 

The retired French general Vincent Desportes told the BBC World Service last week that France should back political change in Mali and remain in the country as long as necessary.

In the Central African Republic (CAR), the current deployment of 1,600 French troops is insufficient: at least 5,000 are needed, Desportes said. No one batted an eyelid. Yet a decade ago, such statements would have been denounced as outrageous imperialist ambition to re-colonise Africa. So what has changed?

From Mali to Somalia, the continent has been convulsed by an arc of conflict. Consider the most recent wars, in CAR and South Sudan. MĂ©decins Sans Frontières, the normally unflappable aid agency,described the violence in CAR as out of control. Half the citizens of Bangui have fled the town and, across the country, about 785,000 people are displaced. The situation in South Sudan is little better: the UN says more than 194,000 people have fled their homes and that 107,000 seek shelter around UN bases.

In all this bloodshed the African Union (AU) is nowhere to be seen. It was French troops that were airlifted into CAR to save the day – just as they did in Mali, Niger and Ivory Coast. UN peacekeepers are being rushedfrom Darfur, Liberia, Ivory Coast, and even Haiti, to try to staunch the fighting in South Sudan. The US deployed marinesfrom their base in Djibouti to Uganda and Juba, the South Sudanese capital, to assist in the evacuation of Americans.

The much-vaunted African Standby Force, with its regional Standby Brigades at the beck and call of the AU has failed to materialise. The idea of a military force answerable to African leaders has its origins in the Rwandan genocide of 1994. Horrified as they looked on helplessly, this bred a determination to intervene in future conflicts.

The problem was discussed in Harare, Zimbabwe, in 1997 by African chiefs of defence staff, but the initiative had to wait until July 2002 before it receive a formal go-ahead. African leaders planned to have five regional forces by 2010 to bring security to their troubled continent.

The Standby Brigades would answer to the AU's peace and security council, the continental equivalent of the UN security council. The aimwas to produce a rapidly deployable force and that by 2012 two units, each 2,500 strong, could be operational within just 14 days.


 
Malian troops battle militants in Gao. Photograph: Frederic Lafargue/AFP/Getty

This was highly ambitious but badly needed. When, in 2002, the AU replaced the OAU, its badly discredited predecessor, it was specifically mandated to prevent a repetition of the Rwandan genocide. The AU's constitution allows it to intervene in a member state to halt what is described as "grave circumstances, namely war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity."

The Standby Brigades gave teeth to this intention and won considerable western support. The US poured money into the initiative, providing $500m to train up to 50,000 African troops. British involvement was also substantial, with more than £110m a year being invested via the African Conflict Prevention Pool for nearly a decade.

Today the figure stands at £51.5m. The pool is a joint initiative, run by the Foreign Office, the Ministry of Defence and the Department for International Development. Little hard information has been provided about its programmes, which were criticised by an independent review.

In reality the Standby Brigades have not got off the ground. Differences between African states run far too deep for them to be used in the continent's many crises. Many of the troops are insufficiently trained, armed or disciplined to be deployed effectively. In November 2013 an official statement from the South African government took the route of least resistance: it announced that the force would be renamed.

The "African Capacity for Immediate Response to Crises" would be what was termed a "transitional arrangement" until the African Standby Force was up and running. The Nigerian Guardian was more forthright. Itreported that the Standby Brigades had made little progress since they were dreamed up more than a decade ago.


A UN armored vehicle in South Sudan passes displaced people walking to the camp where they have sought shelter amid clashes. Photograph: Ben Curtis/AP

So why the failure? It is not as if Africa is incapable of running military operations, given sufficient outside financial and logistical support. The 25,000 strong AU Mission to Somalia, or Amisom, has driven al-Shabaab, the al-Qaida affiliate, out of the capital.
Amisom holds substantial areas of Somalia, but it is, in reality, run by its troop contributors. So Uganda and Burundi call the shots in the capital, while Ethiopia runs its operations in the west, and Kenya holds a strip of land in the far south. Although it nominally works in the AU, the organisation has little control over what it can and cannot do.
The root of the problem lies with a failure of African leadership. When Nigeria's Olusegun Obasanjo and Thabo Mbeki of South Africa held office they worked hand in glove on a range of issues. For a time it seemed that the concept of an African renaissance might become a reality. But the moment faded.
Today Nigeria is resentful that South Africa is the continent's representative among the Brics group of emerging economies. Both countries vie for a possible African seat on the UN security council. And, in Goodluck Jonathan and Jacob Zuma, both nations are saddled with weak presidents obsessed with domestic problems and incapable of giving a sense of direction to the continent.
As a result, the African Standby Force has gone the way of so many other initiatives. Who, for example, now talks of the African Peer Review Mechanism, or suggests there can only be "African solutions to African problems?" From Bamako to Bangui, ordinary African men and women have cowered and waited, hoping that western troops or UN peacekeepers will come to their aid.
Source: theguardian.com,