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Wednesday, October 19, 2016

International Seminar on Renewal Energy to Hold in Nkambe

 Blaise Nkfunkoh Ndamnsah


Dr. Fabio Santoni
This project which is code named “Yellow Project: Develop energy from the sun” is an initiative of Nove Consulting Italy and Nove Consulting Cameroon seeks curb electricity problems in Donga Mantung Division through the introduction and installation of standalone solar modules.  The International seminar which has been scheduled for October 26, 2016 shall take place under the patronage of EuroAfricand, ANOLF and the Frontier Agricultural and Industrial Programme-FAINAP. According to Ta Ngwang Blaise Nkfunkoh Ndamnsah (Project initiator/ Africa Team Nove Consulting) Donga Mantung elite based in Italy, the seminar will bring onboard Italian experts in renewal energy sector. The intention he added is to introduce Italian technologies and equipment in the solar energy sector which could be acquired at affordable rates. Accordingly, Ta Ngwang Blaise Nkfunkoh said that the main speaker at the forthcoming International seminar shall be no other person than Dr. Fabio Santoni, the General Manager of Nove Consulting Italy and Cameroon cum main promoter of the project.  The awareness and sensitization seminar is also open to traditional rulers, chiefs, sub chiefs, business owners, quarter heads, heads of services, and everyone interested in solar energy.
The workshop is fruit of the collaboration between the Nkambe, Ndu, Misaje, Nwa, Ako and Misaje councils of Donga Mantun Division with its Italian partners. Though the seminar is opened to the general public, some of the key personalities expected at the seminar include amongst others, H.E Dr. Fuh Calistus Gentry, H.E Shey Jones Yembe and scores of other Donga Mantung elite(s) as well as traditional rulers. Participants, according to the project initiator shall have the opportunity to see the various standalone solar panels as well as the numerous technologies that is available to the public, it various prices as installation and maintenance techniques.

 


















When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

International Seminar on Renewal Energy to Hold in Nkambe

Ta Ngwang Blaise Nkfunkoh Ndamnsah
This project which is code named “Yellow Project: Develop energy from the sun” is an initiative of Nove Consulting Italy and Nove Consulting Cameroon seeks curb electricity problems in Donga Mantung Division through the introduction and installation of standalone solar modules.  The International seminar which has been scheduled for October 26, 2016 shall take place under the patronage of EuroAfricand, ANOLF and the Frontier Agricultural and Industrial Programme-FAINAP. According to Ta Ngwang Blaise Nkfunkoh Ndamnsah (Project initiator/ Africa Team Nove Consulting) Donga Mantung elite based in Italy, the seminar will bring onboard Italian experts in renewal energy sector. The intention he added is to introduce Italian technologies and equipment in the solar energy sector which could be acquired at affordable rates. Accordingly, Ta Ngwang Blaise Nkfunkoh said that the main speaker at the forthcoming International seminar shall be no other person than Dr. Fabio Santoni, the General Manager of Nove Consulting Italy and Cameroon cum main promoter of the project.  This public awareness and sensitization workshop is also open to councilors, fons, chiefs, sub chiefs, quarter heads, business owners and the general public.

The workshop is fruit of the collaboration between the Nkambe, Ndu, Misaje, Nwa, Ako and Misaje councils of Donga Mantun Division with its Italian partners. Though the seminar is opened to the general public, some of the key personalities expected at the seminar include amongst others, H.E Dr. Fuh Calistus Gentry, H.E Shey Jones Yembe and scores of other Donga Mantung elite(s) as well as traditional rulers. Participants, according to the project initiator shall have the opportunity to see the various standalone solar panels as well as the numerous technologies that is available to the public, it various prices as installation and maintenance techniques.



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Revealed: The Untold Story of the Deal that Yielded the Rescue of 21 Chibok Schoolgirls

An exclusive investigative report has revealed the untold story of the deal that gave birth to the peaceful release of 21 Chibok school girls by Boko Haram group on Thursday.
 
The release of 21 Chibok girls by the terrorist Boko Haram group Thursday was the culmination of more than two years of negotiation and perseverance by a team which first assembled about two years ago.
 The key actors who first initiated the process made their initial attempt to rescue the girls around July 2014, during the Goodluck Jonathan administration, but that effort floundered in the last minutes.
 The initial team comprised Shehu Sani, now a senator; rights activist, Fred Eno; a lawyer, Mustapha Zanna; the Nigerian Army, then led by Kenneth Minimah; the Swiss government; and the International Committee of the Red Cross, which was called in to play a neutral intermediary role.
 Mr. Sani, the sources said, began the process when he reached out to the Swiss Government through its Embassy in Nigeria and then linked them to Mr. Zanah who in turn connected the Swiss authorities and the International Committee of the Red Cross with the leadership of Boko Haram.
 Mr. Jonathan appointed elder statesman, Edwin Clark, to liaise with the team and government. After a few weeks of work, the team nearly secured the release of the girls in 2014.
 Highly placed sources familiar with the negotiation revealed at the time that the deal fell through due to the clumsy manner in which the Jonathan administration handled it.
“It boils down, basically, to three key issues: inflexibility and lack of realism on the part of the insurgent forces; lack of support for a negotiated settlement to the insurgency on the part of security forces; and what appears to be government’s acceptance that the security forces were right,” the sources said.
“The president desperately wanted the girls released, but politics of positioning stood in the way of progress,” Mr. Eno told Premium Times at the time.
 After the initial effort failed, according to our sources, Messrs Sani, Eno and Clark moved on to other things. But other members of the team remained tenacious and kept exploring available options for the release of the girls, this newspaper learnt.
 The State Security Service (SSS) led the fresh negotiation with the team using the existing line of dialogue established in 2014.
 The Nigerian military was left out of the initial negotiation after the Boko Haram leadership reportedly insisted it would have nothing with an organisation that had been killing its members, and had killed some of the Chibok girls in aerial bombardments.
It was learnt that the SSS was therefore enlisted to lead the negotiation, gather intelligence regarding the reliability of the release window and provide other support services essential to the operation.
 After a deal had been struck, the Red Cross was called in to meet the leadership of the sect as well as sight the girls.
 A date and location was then agreed for the release of the girls. On Wednesday, October 14, the military was contacted to deploy some of its men to a particular location in Banki, a border town in Bama local government area of Borno State, to pick up the 21 girls, officials said.
 The girls were released at 5:30 am on Thursday and immediately flown to Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, in a chopper.
 The Nigerian government announced the release of the girls on Thursday morning, hours after they were successfully received from insurgents in the highly confidential operation.
 The Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, dismissed reports that the girls were rescued in exchange for top-level suspected Boko Haram detainees across the country.
 The release was a “product of painstaking negotiations and trust on both sides,” Mr. Mohammed said at a world press conference Thursday afternoon. “Please note that this is not a swap. It is a release.”
 Mr. Mohammed’s comments that the girls were not released based on a prisoner swap deal immediately sparked speculation that the government may have paid ransom.
 However, presidential spokesperson, Femi Adesina, denied that any ransom was paid.
 Mr. Buhari had repeatedly stated his willingness to rescue the girls even if it required swapping them with suspected terrorists in custody.
 
A government source said negotiations for the release of the remaining girls was continuing.
 
Credits: Premium Times



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Int'l Red Cross Society Reveals Own Role in the Release of 21 Chibok Schoolgirls

The International Red Cross society has exclusively explained its role in the Boko Haram release of 21 of the over 200 Chibok school girls abducted by the terrorist group since 2014.
VP Yemi Osinbajo during his meeting with the released 21 schoolgirls in Abuja on Thursday
 
In an exclusive interview with Premium Times on Thursday, the Red Cross Society who reportedly collaborated with the Swiss Government and mediated in the release of the abducted Chibok girls, has explained its role in the Boko Haram release of the 21 school girls abducted by the terror group in 2014.
 Elodie Schindler, the spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross in Africa, said; “The role we played was neutral intermediary. We were not involved in the negotiation.
“What we usually do is when two parties are negotiating, we don’t get involved. But when they have struck a deal, they can then call us in to mediate,” he said.
 Ms. Schindler said when the Nigerian government and Boko Haram reached a deal, they contacted the Red Cross to come in, inspect, and receive the girls, adding that her organisation played no other role beyond that.
 The Red Cross was also involved in a 2014 negotiation between the Nigerian government, under President Goodluck Jonathan, and the terror group. 
 A former information minister and Ijaw leader, Edwin Clark, led the government team to the negotiation said to have been bungled at the last hour by the government‘s exuberant display of enthusiasm and excessive show of force.
 The Swiss Embassy is yet to speak on its role in the release of the girls.



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Good News: Nigeria Government Offers Scholarship, Jobs to the 21 Freed Chibok Schollgirls

Vice-President, Yemi Osinbajo has given the 21 released Chiboks renewed hope with the decision to cater for them educationally and otherwise.
Some of the 21 released Chibok Girls
 
The Federal Government has promised to take care of the education and job needs of the the 21 freed Chibok girls. The promise was made by the Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo while visiting the girls at the DSS Medical Centre, Abuja, where they were receiving medical attention on Thursday.
 According to a statement released by his spokesman, Mr. Laolu Akande, Osinbajo as saying that the government will make provisions for girls to go back to school and also provide employment for those who wish to work.
 He said, “You can’t immediately be taken out of here because we need to be sure that you are in very good health.
 “I am sure you are going to be very well taken care of. We have provided very good accommodation for you where you will stay where you will sleep and your parents will come and meet you there also.
“We are also going to see to it that everything that you require going forward, perhaps your education, those who need to go back to school, those who need to find employment, we are going to make sure that we make all the provisions for you.
“The Federal Government is very committed. The President in particular, has asked me to tell you, how excited he is. When you were away, he kept saying that if it were his daughter, he wouldn’t even know what to do.”



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Photos, Full Names of the Released 21 Chibok Schoolgirls

There were tears of joy on Thursday when the freed 21 Chibok schoolgirls met with Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo and his wife at the Department of State Services (DSS) headquarters in Abuja.
 
Speaking with journalists on Thursday when he received the freed 21 Chibok schoolgirls at the Department of State Services (DSS) headquarters in Abuja with his wife, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, said the President Buhari-led federal government would use the rescue of the 21 girls as template for the securing the freedom of others in captivity of the Boko Hama Islamic sect.
 “We must be sensitive to the fact that the government wants these girls back and alive. Again, we must balance this against the security and safety of the country.
“In the process of negotiation, we will look at all options and we will weigh the options carefully and decide what to do.
“We believe that in the next few days and months, we will be bringing in more of these girls using exactly the same kind of negotiation and the same template that we used,” he said.
 
 
VP Osinbajo also said that only one of the 21 girls had a baby.
 “About an hour ago, I met with the 21 Chibok girls who have been brought back and they are in good health, considering the circumstances they have been held in and they are now being well taken care of in a medical facility.
“They will be staying there for sometime until we are satisfied about their health. Their parents will be coming to join them, hopefully by tomorrow.
“There will be therapy, there will be counselling. Of course, we can imagine what they have gone through. So, we expect that a lot of psychological therapy and so much needs to be done to get them back,” he said. 
See more photos and video below
 




When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Read the Full Text of Aisha Buhari's Interview With BBC Hausa

 The wife of the President, Aisha Buhari recently courted controversy after granting an interview to the BBC Hausa Service in which she alleged that some people have hijacked her husband's government.
Mrs. Aisha Buhari
 
This is the full text of First Lady of Nigeria, Aisha Buhari's interview she granted to the BBC Hausa Service as translated by www.nishadi.tv.
 
BBC Hausa: It has been One and a half years since President Muhammadu Buhari came into power, a lot of people are expressing their unhappiness over the way few acquaintance of the President have hijacked power while neglecting people that work for his success. Like we have promised, here is how the interview with Aisha Buhari and Naziru Maka’ilu from Abuja goes.
 
BBC Hausa: People have goodwill towards President Muhammadu Buhari, especially looking at the things he did before, but since coming into power things have not been working the way they should, what do you thing is the cause?
 
Aisha Buhari:  I am not a government official, but in my opinion as a woman, a mother, what I think is it is well known that the first 4 years are not going to be easy. Firstly, it was people that brought the government into power. More than half of those people are not appointed into the government. Some people that are not politicians, not professionals were brought into the government. They don’t even know what we said we want and what we don’t during the campaign.  They even come out and say to people we are not politicians, but they are occupying the offices meant for politicians. Some have parted with their wives, some lost their children lost, some women too have parted with their husbands because of politics, a lot happened during the time. The way things are going I too I am not happy. We are just starting, we have not finished. Some people that worked for the government have been appointed. But those heading government agencies you can find one fighting his state governor, they contested together during election one in APC while in PDP.
 
BBC Hausa: Who are those doing these kinds of things?
 
Aisha Buhari: Everybody knows them. Those people should know that people voted singly. Even Buhari too had one vote. Nobody voted 5 times. 15.429 Million People. That one that people are thinking too, he had only some 2 or 3 people. I am pleading to them to have the people at heart and embrace everybody so that we can all move together. Not even now in 2016 or 17, lot of people are creating divisions within the APC, which is our source of concern. They think they have worked for the government while those appointed some of them had no voter’s card. What I fear is uprising of 15.4 million people.
 
BBC Hausa: Is the President aware some people are subverting his government?
 
Aisha Buhari: Whether he knows or he do not, those that voted for him knows.
 
BBC Hausa: But you are the most closest to him, did you tell him?
 
Aisha Buhari: There is nothing I can tell him, he is seeing things himself. Out of the people he has appointed, take 50, 45 of them I don’t know them. Perhaps he doesn’t know them too. I have been living with him for 27 years.
 
BBC Hausa: Do you think there are some people that are dictating to the President things to do, not him?
 
Aisha Buhari: That is what I am saying, those that know they don’t have voters card, they should give chance to those that have, they are the ones that struggled and knows what we want to do. Some of them if you go to a meeting with them they will tell you, we are not politicians, if somebody is wise, they will not accept to take any political office. They didn’t even work for it. Even if you are asked to, you should say it is not my profession.  Those places not headed by politicians will cause people discontent.
 
BBC Hausa: One would wonder to hear you say some people have hijacked the government without him knowing, but who do you think are those people?
 
Aisha Buhari: I don’t know them, I don’t know them. I don’t know them
 
BBC Hausa: But some people are calling names, saying 2 or 3 are the ones, do you that as well?
 
Aisha Buhari: Yes I agree. Because of those appointed apart from Fashola, Ameachi and some others, not much, I don’t know them, most of us too don’t know them, and he too does not know them
 
BBC Hausa: One would wonder that Buhari is not the one charge knowing him as a person who had leadership experiences, people would not believe.
 
Aisha Buhari: Yes it is surprising; nobody thought it is going to be like this. But now that it is so…sometimes when one is doing something wrong without him knowing, but when people talk to them, they should listen. Because in the future, whether he is going to contest or not, it is that same people that would vote for APC. We hope those people don’t come back, and everybody don’t hope so too
 
BBC Hausa: You said “Whether he is going to contest in the future or not”, has he disclose it to you whether he is standing or not?
 
Aisha Buhari: He didn’t tell me, but I have made up my mind.


When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Aisha Belongs in My Kitchen and Living room - President Buhari Reacts to His Wife's Controversial BBC Interview

President Muhammadu Buhari has officially reacted to his wife's much-talked about BBC exclusive interview, saying his wife, Aisha belongs in his kitchen and bedroom.

 While speaking with journalists in Germany, President Muhammadu Buhari, who is currently in the country on an official visit, has responded to an interview his wife, Aisha granted the BBC, where she said that her husband's government had been hijacked by those who did not labour to put him there.
 We had earlier reported that in an exclusive interview with BBC Hausa service, the wife of the president, Aisha, also said that she might not support her husband under the present circumstances if he seeks re-election in 2019.
"The president does not know 45 out of 50, for example, of the people he appointed and I don't know them either, despite being his wife of 27 years.
"Some people are sitting down in their homes folding their arms only for them to be called to come and head an agency or a ministerial position," Mrs Aisha was quoted to have told BBC.
 
President Buhari when he arrived Germany late on Thursday
 
According to TheCable News, while reacting to his wife's comments to newsmen in Germany the president who is on a three-day visit to the country, said;
“I don’t know which party my wife belongs to, but she belongs to my kitchen and my living room and the other room,” he joked.
“I claim superior knowledge over her and the rest of the opposition, because in the end I have succeeded. It is not easy to satisfy the whole Nigerian opposition parties or to participate in the government,” Buhari said.




When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Boko Haram Commanders Were Exchanged for Chibok Girls - CNN Reveals in Shocking Report

 CNN is reporting that a number of Boko Haram commanders were freed as part of Thursday's release of 21 Chibok schoolgirls which have been in captivity for almost 2 years.
 Conflicting information is emerging about what Boko Haram received in exchange for releasing 21 Chibok schoolgirls in Nigeria this week after holding them for two years.
 "A number of Boko Haram commanders" were freed as part of Thursday's release of the girls, a source close to the negotiations between the Islamist militant group and the Nigerian government said on condition of anonymity.
 This contrasts with what the Nigerian government has said, which is that the girls' release was not a prisoner exchange.
 "This was not a swap," Nigerian Information Minister Alhaji Lai Mohammed said Thursday. "It is a release, the product of painstaking negotiations and trust on both sides."
 A separate source, one with direct knowledge about the girls' release, told CNN Thursday that no captive Boko Haram fighters were released in exchange for the girls.
 The 21 that Boko Haram released Thursday were among the 276 girls and women, ages 16 to 18, that militants herded from bed in the middle of the night at a boarding school in Chibok, Nigeria, in April 2014 - a kidnapping that spurred global outrage.
 
Credits: CNN.com



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Ivory Coast Player Helps Save Opponent's Life After He Collapsed and Swallows Tongue During World Cup Qualifier

A popular PSG player Serge Aurier has become an unlikely hero after he helped save an opponents life who was swallowing his tongue.
Serge Aurier helped put Moussa Doumbia to his side after he fell and began swallowing his tongue
 
PSG defender Serge Aurier has helped save the life of one of his opponents during Ivory Coast's win over Mali.  According to Dailymail, the Ivory Coast international rushed to his opponent's side after the Malian player, Moussa Doumbia collapsed during the early stages of the World Cup qualifier between the west African rivals and is said to have started swallowing his tongue.
 Aurier quickly put Doumbia on his side to help him and later visited the player in hospital. 

 
'Doumbia fell and was swallowing his own tongue and Serge was one of the first to arrive and help,' said Mali boss Fousseni Diawara.
 'That's when Aurier, with one of our players, quickly put him on his side and pulled out his tongue, because he was about to lose his life.
 'There is one thing nobody is talking about, which is the manner in which he helped a Malian on the pitch.'
 'On Monday, we flew back to Paris together and we did not talk about it [the throat-slit gesture],' he told Goal.com.
 'Instead, he was praising our team. Ivory Coast-Mali is a hotly contested derby for both sets of supporters because the Malians and Ivorians are a bit like cousins.'





When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Lesbian Reverend Sisters Get Married to Each Other

 Two reverend sisters have shocked the world by getting married to each other prompting the Pope to react on the matter.
Two reverend sisters have gotten married to each other, a development which has caused a stir around the world.
 Pope Francis has even reacted to the development.
 According to him, he has been 'saddened' after he heard the two nuns had married each other in a secret civil ceremony in Italy, a Vatican official has revealed.
 According to Daily Mail, the women, known as Sister Federica and Sister Isabel, tied the knot in Pinerolo, near Turin on September 28 after falling in love during a mission in West Africa.
 They have since revealed they decided to follow their hearts after hearing the Pope's comments on gay people in 2013 when he famously said: 'Who am I to judge?'
 But far from being happy about the union, Vatican Deputy Secretary of State Archbishop Angelo Becciu said the Pope, 79, was left visibly upset. 
 'How much sadness on the pope's face when I read him the news of the two married 'nuns'!' Becciu tweeted on Friday.
 Daily Mail reports that during an interview with La Repubblica, Federica, 44, from Italy, and Isabel, 40, from South America, declared their love was a 'gift from God'.
 They said they did not want to just live together in a convent and keep their relationship under wraps as this would be 'false'.
 The couple revealed they decided to act on their feelings when Pope Francis encouraged those in the Catholic Church not to judge others.
 During an interview in 2013, the religious leader said: 'If a person is gay and seeks the Lord and has good will, well who am I to judge them?'
 The two nuns said: 'That phrase has opened our hearts.'
 They took advantage of a law passed this year that offers homosexual couples legal recognition in Italy – one of the last countries in the West to do so.
 Last week, Pope Francis said all transsexuals and homosexuals should be 'welcomed' and embraced by the Catholic Church.
 He said Jesus would never have turned away transgender people and revealed he had ministered to homosexuals as a priest, bishop and now as Pope.
 'When a person arrives before Jesus, Jesus certainly will not say, 'Go away because you are homosexual',' the religious leader said.
 
'Each case must be welcomed, accompanied, studied, discerned and integrated. This is what Jesus would do today.'



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Sunday, October 9, 2016

AFRICAN UNION SIGNS AGREEMENT ON AFRICA'S HIGH-SPEED RAILWAY NETWORK


DIRECTORATE OF INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION
 
Press Release Nº348/2016
 
AFRICAN UNION SIGNS AGREEMENT ON AFRICA'S HIGH-SPEED RAILWAY NETWORK
 
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – 5 October 2016: Africa’s dream to connect all its capital and major cities with an Integrated High-speed Railway Network has taken another critical step following the signing of a Five-Year Action Plan between the African Union Commission (AUC), and the Government of the Peoples Republic of China.
The signing ceremony by the Chairperson of the African Union Commission (AUC), Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, and an Envoy of the Chinese President, Minister of National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Mr. XU Shaoshi, took place at the AU Headquarters on Wednesday, 5 October 2016.
The Integrated High Speed Train Network is a flagship project of Africa’s continental Agenda 2063 and the Five-Year Action Plan is a result of numerous planning sessions and exchange working visits between the AUC and the Chinese following the Memorandum of Understanding signed between the two sides in January 2015, to promote cooperation in railway, road, regional aviation networks and industrialization fields.
A number of milestones are expected to be realised in the next five years including:-
  • The development and agreement on relevant laws and regulations regarding railway cooperation.
  • The establishment of a Project Implementation Unit (PIU) by the AUC in the next 6 to 12 months.
  • Collaboration in supporting and facilitating cooperation between African and Chinese enterprises, particularly, in local enterprise supplier development and development of advanced manufacturing across the African continent; transfer of technology, capacity-building for local manufacturing and content, as well as education and the development of prerequisite skills.
 
The Chinese Government will also lead the formation of a Chinese group for Sino-Africa cooperation in railway and high-speed railway, which will integrate resources of financing institutions, railway construction companies and railway operation management companies.
Appreciating this new step in the high-speed railway connectivity project, the Chairperson of the AU Commission said Africa looks forward to a focus on training in all the areas of skills required and transfer of technology.
Minister XU Shaoshi, who was also attending the inauguration of the newly constructed Addis Ababa – Djibouti railway which was built with the support of China, expressed the determination of China to deliver on commitments made by Prime Minister Li Keqiang, when he visited Africa in May 2014, and further cemented by President Xi Jinping during the Forum for China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) that was held in December 2015, in Johannesburg, South Africa.
 




When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Discovery: What You Need to Know About Robert Mugabe. Salary, Assets, Other Rare Achievements

This is the full profile of the controversial and long-serving President of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe who has expressed reluctance about vacating the seat of power in spite of his old age.
Robert Mugabe
Robert Mugabe is a Zimbabwean politician and the current president of the country. This biography provides detailed information about his childhood, life, political career and timeline.

ALSO KNOWN AS: Robert Gabriel Mugabe

FAMOUS AS: Former PM & Current President of Zimbabwe
NATIONALITY: Zimbabwean
RELIGION: Roman Catholicism
POLITICAL IDEOLOGY: National Democratic Party (1960–1961), Zimbabwe African People’s Union (1961–1963), Zimbabwe African National Union (1963–1987), Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (1987–present).
BORN ON: 21 February 1924 AD

BIRTHDAY: 21st February  

AGE: 92 Years
SUN SIGN: Pisces
BORN IN: Harare

FATHER: Gabriel Matibili
MOTHER: Bona
SIBLINGS: Michael, Donato
SPOUSES/PARTNERS: Grace Mugabe (m. 1996), Sally Hayfron (m. 1987–1992)
CHILDREN: Tinashé, Bona Mugabe, Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, Robert Peter Mugabe, Michael Nhamodzenyika Mugabe

EDUCATION: University of Oxford, University of Fort Hare, University of London, University of South Africa

NET WORTH: $10 Million
AWARDS: 1994 – Knight Grand Cross in the Order of the Bath for significant contributions, “Robert Mugabe” by Mangwanani – Own work. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Robert Mugabe is a former revolutionary and Zimbabwean politician and is best known for his struggles against the British, when Zimbabwe was known as Rhodesia. From a very young age, he was greatly inspired by Marxist and nationalist views and soon, became the publicity secretary of the National Democratic Party or the ‘NDP’.
Once he established a strong political foothold, he founded the socialist-nationalist movement, ‘ZANU’ which resolved to drive the British out of their homeland. Despite being detained by Rhodesian authorities for his radical activities, Mugabe remained calm and took an oath to deliver his people from the talons of foreign brutality. Soon after their independence, Mugabe became the prime minister and thereafter the president of the country – a post that he serves till today. During his tenure as president, he managed to unite the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU) with the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), challenging all those who threatened to colonize independent Zimbabwe.
Childhood & Early Life

Robert Gabriel Mugabe was born on February 21, 1924 as the third of the six children to Gabriel Matibili and Bona, both of whom were Roman Catholic. His elder brothers died when he was very young and in 1934, his father deserted the family.

He studied in all-exclusive Jesuit, Roman Catholic schools and also attended the Kutama College, where he is believed to have led a solitary life and preferred to keep company with his books.

He was meant to become a teacher but then decided to study at Fort Hare in South Africa, from where he graduated in 1951. He then went on to study at Salisbury, Gwelo, Tanzania and subsequently earned six more degrees in addition to his Bachelor of Arts degree, which he obtained from the University of Fort Hare.
   
After graduation, he became a lecturer at Chalimbana Teacher Training College in Northern Rhodesia between the years 1955 to 1958. It was around this time he was highly influenced by Marxist works and by the-then Prime Minister of Ghana, Kwame Nikrumah.

Career

In 1960, he joined the National Democratic Party and after it was banned in September, he formed the group; Zimbabwe African Peoples Union (ZAPU), which was led by Joshua Nkomo.

In 1963, he left ZAPU and formed the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), established on the basis of Africanist philosophies of the Pan Africanist Congress in South Africa.

Both ZANU and ZAPU were officially banned on August 26, 1964 after a long spell of political unrest. It was during this time that Mugabe was arrested and imprisoned indeterminately.

In 1974, while still in confinement, he was elected, under the influence of Edgar Tekere, to take over ZANU. The same year, he was released from prison along with other separatist leaders, so that he could go to a conference in Lusaka, Zambia.

He fled back to the border of Southern Rhodesia and accumulated a troop of Rhodesian rebel trainees. The struggle continued through the 1970s and the economy of Zimbabwe was in a state of pandemonium.
   
In 1979, the British colonies agreed to observe the switch to black majority rule and the UN raised sanctions. The subsequent year, Southern Rhodesia gained independence from the British and became the independent Republic of Zimbabwe.

On March 4, 1980, ZANU won 57 out of 80 Common Roll Seats and Mugabe was elected to lead the first government as prime minister. After his election, he attempted to build Zimbabwe on the foundation of an edgy union with his ZAPU rivals.

In 1981, a war broke out between ZANU and ZAPU. Four years later, Mugabe was re-elected and the fight persisted.

After the murder of two ministers from the groups in 1987, Mugabe and Nkomo decided to merge their unions, for the betterment and quick recovery of the Zimbabwe’s economy.

The position of prime minister was obliterated and Mugabe assumed the new office of the executive President of Zimbabwe in 1987. He chose Nkomo to become one of the senior ministers. Two years later, he implemented a five-year plan, which greatly benefited the economy.

In 1996, political unrest began to surface again and his followers, who deemed Mugabe as their hero, began to resent their decision, because they did not support many of his political strategies.

He passed a revision in 2000, wherein the amendment stated that Britain would have to pay compensations for seizing land from the blacks and if the British failed to do so, Mugabe would in turn, seize theirs.

In 2002, he won the presidential elections at a time when the economy of Zimbabwe was in near ruins with widespread unemployment, famine and AIDS and fought to keep his office through brute force. This led him to win the parliamentary elections also, three years later.

He lost the presidential elections to Morgan Tsvangirai in 2008, but refused to let go of his office and demanded a recount of the votes. In order to gain maximum number of votes, he also went as far as violently attacking or killing members of the opposition party. This sudden outburst by Mugabe and his followers, led to another deadly outbreak, resulting in bloodshed and loss of many lives.

After lots of bloodshed, Tsvangirai and Mugabe came to a mutual agreement that they both would share the power. In 2010, he selected provisional governors for Zimbabwe without consulting Tsvangirai, which proved that he still wanted to have total autocratic control.

The next year, he announced his bid for the 2012 presidential elections, which was for an indefinite period, postponed to 2013.

He displayed his interest to challenge Tsvangirai once again in the elections and in July 2013, when he was asked about his plans to run for the presidential post in future, he mentioned that he would like to rule Zimbabwe till he hit a ‘century’.

Zimbabwe’s election commission declared Mugabe the president in August 2013 after winning a total of 61 per cent of the vote.

Major Works

When he was elected as the President of Zimbabwe, he decided to implement a five-year plan, starting from 1989. In the course of this five-year plan, he loosened price limits for farmers, allowing them to set their own prices and he also built a number of clinics and schools for the people. By the end of the five year period, the economy had seen drastic positive change in terms of the manufacturing, mining and farming industries.

Awards & Achievements


He holds a number of degrees and doctorates from international universities, all of which were presented to him through the 1980s.

He was elected as a UN ‘Leader of Tourism’.

Personal Life & Legacy


He tied the knot with Sally Hayfron in April 1961. The couple was blessed with a son who died at the age of three after suffering from cerebral malaria.

His wife died of a kidney problem in 1992. At the time of her death, Mugabe was already in a parallel relationship with his former secretary, Grace Marufu, who was married to someone else and was 41 years younger to Mugabe.
He married Grace Marufu on 17 August 1996. He already had two children with Grace when he married her. She initially became pregnant when he was still married to his first wife, Sally. His wife is sometimes mockingly called, ‘Gucci Grace’ for her ostentatious ways and lifestyle.

The film ‘The Interpreter’ features a deleterious portrayal of a fictional African ruler, which in many ways fits Mugabe’s character in real life. His government later described the film as a ‘CIA-campaign against Robert Mugabe’.

Trivia

While this famous personality from Zimbabwe was still in prison, he received three honorary degrees; two Law degrees and a Master of Science degree.
This first prime minister of independent Zimbabwe and the then President won a first prize jackpot of Z$100,000, in 2000. The lottery was accessible for all those clients who had more than Z$ 5,000 in the ZimBank accounts.



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Discovery: What You Need to Know About Robert Mugabe. Salary, Assets, Other Rare Achievements

This is the full profile of the controversial and long-serving President of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe who has expressed reluctance about vacating the seat of power in spite of his old age.
Robert Mugabe
 
Robert Mugabe is a Zimbabwean politician and the current president of the country. This biography provides detailed information about his childhood, life, political career and timeline.

ALSO KNOWN AS: Robert Gabriel Mugabe

FAMOUS AS: Former PM & Current President of Zimbabwe
 
NATIONALITY: Zimbabwean
 
RELIGION: Roman Catholicism
 
POLITICAL IDEOLOGY: National Democratic Party (1960–1961), Zimbabwe African People’s Union (1961–1963), Zimbabwe African National Union (1963–1987), Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (1987–present).
 
BORN ON: 21 February 1924 AD

BIRTHDAY: 21st February  

AGE: 92 Years
 
SUN SIGN: Pisces
 
BORN IN: Harare

FATHER: Gabriel Matibili
 
MOTHER: Bona
 
SIBLINGS: Michael, Donato
 
SPOUSES/PARTNERS: Grace Mugabe (m. 1996), Sally Hayfron (m. 1987–1992)
 
CHILDREN: Tinashé, Bona Mugabe, Bellarmine Chatunga Mugabe, Robert Peter Mugabe, Michael Nhamodzenyika Mugabe

EDUCATION: University of Oxford, University of Fort Hare, University of London, University of South Africa

NET WORTH: $10 Million
 
AWARDS: 1994 – Knight Grand Cross in the Order of the Bath for significant contributions, “Robert Mugabe” by Mangwanani – Own work. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Robert Mugabe is a former revolutionary and Zimbabwean politician and is best known for his struggles against the British, when Zimbabwe was known as Rhodesia. From a very young age, he was greatly inspired by Marxist and nationalist views and soon, became the publicity secretary of the National Democratic Party or the ‘NDP’.
 
Once he established a strong political foothold, he founded the socialist-nationalist movement, ‘ZANU’ which resolved to drive the British out of their homeland. Despite being detained by Rhodesian authorities for his radical activities, Mugabe remained calm and took an oath to deliver his people from the talons of foreign brutality. Soon after their independence, Mugabe became the prime minister and thereafter the president of the country – a post that he serves till today. During his tenure as president, he managed to unite the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU) with the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), challenging all those who threatened to colonize independent Zimbabwe.
 
Childhood & Early Life

Robert Gabriel Mugabe was born on February 21, 1924 as the third of the six children to Gabriel Matibili and Bona, both of whom were Roman Catholic. His elder brothers died when he was very young and in 1934, his father deserted the family.

He studied in all-exclusive Jesuit, Roman Catholic schools and also attended the Kutama College, where he is believed to have led a solitary life and preferred to keep company with his books.

He was meant to become a teacher but then decided to study at Fort Hare in South Africa, from where he graduated in 1951. He then went on to study at Salisbury, Gwelo, Tanzania and subsequently earned six more degrees in addition to his Bachelor of Arts degree, which he obtained from the University of Fort Hare.
   
After graduation, he became a lecturer at Chalimbana Teacher Training College in Northern Rhodesia between the years 1955 to 1958. It was around this time he was highly influenced by Marxist works and by the-then Prime Minister of Ghana, Kwame Nikrumah.

Career

In 1960, he joined the National Democratic Party and after it was banned in September, he formed the group; Zimbabwe African Peoples Union (ZAPU), which was led by Joshua Nkomo.

In 1963, he left ZAPU and formed the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), established on the basis of Africanist philosophies of the Pan Africanist Congress in South Africa.

Both ZANU and ZAPU were officially banned on August 26, 1964 after a long spell of political unrest. It was during this time that Mugabe was arrested and imprisoned indeterminately.

In 1974, while still in confinement, he was elected, under the influence of Edgar Tekere, to take over ZANU. The same year, he was released from prison along with other separatist leaders, so that he could go to a conference in Lusaka, Zambia.

He fled back to the border of Southern Rhodesia and accumulated a troop of Rhodesian rebel trainees. The struggle continued through the 1970s and the economy of Zimbabwe was in a state of pandemonium.
   
In 1979, the British colonies agreed to observe the switch to black majority rule and the UN raised sanctions. The subsequent year, Southern Rhodesia gained independence from the British and became the independent Republic of Zimbabwe.

On March 4, 1980, ZANU won 57 out of 80 Common Roll Seats and Mugabe was elected to lead the first government as prime minister. After his election, he attempted to build Zimbabwe on the foundation of an edgy union with his ZAPU rivals.

In 1981, a war broke out between ZANU and ZAPU. Four years later, Mugabe was re-elected and the fight persisted.

After the murder of two ministers from the groups in 1987, Mugabe and Nkomo decided to merge their unions, for the betterment and quick recovery of the Zimbabwe’s economy.

The position of prime minister was obliterated and Mugabe assumed the new office of the executive President of Zimbabwe in 1987. He chose Nkomo to become one of the senior ministers. Two years later, he implemented a five-year plan, which greatly benefited the economy.

In 1996, political unrest began to surface again and his followers, who deemed Mugabe as their hero, began to resent their decision, because they did not support many of his political strategies.

He passed a revision in 2000, wherein the amendment stated that Britain would have to pay compensations for seizing land from the blacks and if the British failed to do so, Mugabe would in turn, seize theirs.

In 2002, he won the presidential elections at a time when the economy of Zimbabwe was in near ruins with widespread unemployment, famine and AIDS and fought to keep his office through brute force. This led him to win the parliamentary elections also, three years later.

He lost the presidential elections to Morgan Tsvangirai in 2008, but refused to let go of his office and demanded a recount of the votes. In order to gain maximum number of votes, he also went as far as violently attacking or killing members of the opposition party. This sudden outburst by Mugabe and his followers, led to another deadly outbreak, resulting in bloodshed and loss of many lives.

After lots of bloodshed, Tsvangirai and Mugabe came to a mutual agreement that they both would share the power. In 2010, he selected provisional governors for Zimbabwe without consulting Tsvangirai, which proved that he still wanted to have total autocratic control.

The next year, he announced his bid for the 2012 presidential elections, which was for an indefinite period, postponed to 2013.

He displayed his interest to challenge Tsvangirai once again in the elections and in July 2013, when he was asked about his plans to run for the presidential post in future, he mentioned that he would like to rule Zimbabwe till he hit a ‘century’.

Zimbabwe’s election commission declared Mugabe the president in August 2013 after winning a total of 61 per cent of the vote.

Major Works

When he was elected as the President of Zimbabwe, he decided to implement a five-year plan, starting from 1989. In the course of this five-year plan, he loosened price limits for farmers, allowing them to set their own prices and he also built a number of clinics and schools for the people. By the end of the five year period, the economy had seen drastic positive change in terms of the manufacturing, mining and farming industries.

Awards & Achievements


He holds a number of degrees and doctorates from international universities, all of which were presented to him through the 1980s.

He was elected as a UN ‘Leader of Tourism’.

Personal Life & Legacy


He tied the knot with Sally Hayfron in April 1961. The couple was blessed with a son who died at the age of three after suffering from cerebral malaria.

His wife died of a kidney problem in 1992. At the time of her death, Mugabe was already in a parallel relationship with his former secretary, Grace Marufu, who was married to someone else and was 41 years younger to Mugabe.
 
He married Grace Marufu on 17 August 1996. He already had two children with Grace when he married her. She initially became pregnant when he was still married to his first wife, Sally. His wife is sometimes mockingly called, ‘Gucci Grace’ for her ostentatious ways and lifestyle.

The film ‘The Interpreter’ features a deleterious portrayal of a fictional African ruler, which in many ways fits Mugabe’s character in real life. His government later described the film as a ‘CIA-campaign against Robert Mugabe’.

Trivia

While this famous personality from Zimbabwe was still in prison, he received three honorary degrees; two Law degrees and a Master of Science degree.
This first prime minister of independent Zimbabwe and the then President won a first prize jackpot of Z$100,000, in 2000. The lottery was accessible for all those clients who had more than Z$ 5,000 in the ZimBank accounts.



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Saturday, October 8, 2016

The Real Libya Died with Colonel Muammar Gaddafi - Troubled Libyans Cry Out

Citizens of Libya, filled with anger against their leader, Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, ganged up and mercilessly killed him. However, years after the incident, some have realized that the move may have been a fatal mistake.
 
Muammar Gaddafi
 
One Mahommed, a 31 year old Libyan spoke words that largely resonated with the general feeling in his country.
 
He said, “I joined the revolution in the first days and fought against Gaddafi. Before 2011, I hated Gaddafi more than anyone. But now, life is much, much harder, and I have become his biggest fan.”
 
The country has seen a five-fold increase in the cost of food, unpaid salaries for months, the rise of Islamic State terror and worsening electricity black-outs. Nothing improved after Gaddafi and the country sees it now. Mahmoud, another Libyan added his own words of disappointment in the bitter fruits of the revolution, “We have had seven governments since 2011 and what have they achieved?’ The only thing we can see is new dustbins because one of the early governments installed these new large bins across Tripoli. We still point to them and laugh, saying it’s the only achievement of the revolution.”
 
The real Libya died with Gaddafi
 
An oil worker named Haroun said getting rid of Gaddafi “was clearly a mistake because we weren’t ready for democracy and we needed support from the international community, which just wasn’t there.”
 
The West was eager to bomb but aborted the mission to restructure and help rebuild the ruins left in the aftermath of the bombings. Libyans were left to figure out a democracy they had not had for more than four decades on their own resulting in numerous groups claiming power using military means. Political activist Fadiel told the Dailymail that although “it should be better than Gaddafi’s time now,” all that remained is “chaos and everyone fighting each other, it’s just a mess.”
 
Another Libyan who spoke about the country’s situation boldly said, “Libya died with Gaddafi. We are not a nation anymore, we have become just warring groups of tribes, towns and cities. Before, there was just one Gaddafi but now we have six million little Gaddafis.”
 
The country has three governments all unwilling to compromise. There were two governments but another has been imposed on the country by the West through the United Nations. The country is so polarised that a former Libyan diplomat is on record saying, “The country is already divided. We have two governments, two parliaments, two Central banks and two National Oil Companies.”
 
As if this is not enough, the Islamic State has firmly held the city of Sirte for some time causing fears that this will become the factory of terrorist activity producing hardcore jihadist extremist fighters. The West has however jumped into the fray helping regain some ground from the IS fighters. The latest attack by the United States was an airstrike on the 1st of August. The other powers have been largely secretive about their intervention but a new militant group, Benghazi Defence Brigades killed three French in July 2016.
 
The fallacy of a revolution
 
Former diplomat Abdusalem is not the most objective of characters but the sense of his words is difficult to argue with.
 
He says, “The so-called revolution was lies, all lies. We Libyans did not even know what the word revolution meant. We had been sheltered under Qaddafi for 42 years. It was not Libya’s revolution, it was NATO’s revolution because they wanted to get rid of Gaddafi.”
 
Though it is a slight exaggeration since some people genuinely wanted Gaddafi out of power, it is true that NATO hijacked the cause and furthered its own ends with no regard for the future of the country. Obama admitted it was no longer an intervention for the right reasons but had become (France’s) Sarkozy and (Britain’s) Cameron’s shit-show.
 
Cameron was also ruled to be ultimately responsible for the chaos in Libya by a recent report by his country’s legislature.
 
Though NATO says it intervened to protect civilians, Salem, a 26 year old medical student from Tripoli has argued, “Far more people have been killed since 2011 than during the revolution or under 42 years of Gaddafi’s rule combined. We never had these problems under Gaddafi.”
 
It is estimated that there are over 1,700 armed groups which rose as a result of the “revolution”; now politics in Libya cannot be determined by ballots but guns and bombs. The people of Libya have never been worse off. The democracy they hoped for has not come and to add insult to injury, there is no peace and the greatest terrorist organisation of this time is attempting to establish its base in the country. To quote the words of a citizen, “Libya died with Gaddafi”.
 
Interviews with Libyan citizens were carried out by the Daily Mail. 







When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)