African nations divided over Bashir genocide charge

KAMPALA, July 25 (Reuters) – African countries are divided about whether they should arrest Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir on suspicion of genocide, diplomats at a summit told Reuters on Sunday.

Bashir was indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes in Darfur last year. This month the court added genocide to the charges, accusing him of orchestrating murders, rapes, and torture in the troubled western region.

A draft of a resolution to be passed at the African Union (AU) meeting in Ugandan capital Kampala, seen by Reuters on Saturday, contained two contentious clauses that have triggered horse-trading behind the scenes at the event.

But both paragraphs were removed after arguments that went on until 3 a.m. on Sunday, AU and Western diplomats said.

The first clause advised African countries not to arrest Bashir if he visited their nations — even if they had signed up to the ICC as 30 African countries have.

“(The AU) reiterates its decision that AU member states shall not cooperate with the ICC in the arrest and surrender of President Bashir,” the paragraph said.

The second deleted clause attacked prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo.

“BASHIR DIVIDING US”

“Those two parts caused a big fight between the delegates,” an African diplomat, who was at the meeting, told Reuters. “Bashir is dividing us.”

The latest draft resolution also “rejects for the moment” a request by the ICC to open an “Africa liaison office” in Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, diplomats said.

Some African leaders say the court is obsessed with prosecuting Africans and ignores war criminals on other continents.

AU Commission Chairman Jean Ping has said the decision to prosecute Bashir has undermined peace efforts in Sudan.

AU summits have been marked by fights over issues such as Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s “United States of Africa” plan and the ICC.

The rows often pit northern and western states — rallied by Gaddafi — against a group of countries seen by analysts as close Western allies and usually helmed by South Africa.

“South Africa, Ghana and Botswana led the argument that the clauses should be removed,” a Western diplomat, who had seen the altered draft, told Reuters.

“Libya, Eritrea, Egypt and some other countries who have not signed up to the ICC fought strongly against that but they lost out in the end.”

Bashir went to Chad this week in defiance of his arrest warrant on his first visit to a full ICC member since he was charged. The court said Chad should arrest Bashir, but Chad said after Bashir’s arrival that it had no intention to do that.

The defiant leader returned to his capital Khartoum untouched. The final AU resolution on the ICC is expected to be agreed by heads of state on Tuesday. (Additional reporting by Jeremy Clarke)

African leaders denounce Uganda bombers at summit

KAMPALA, July 25 (Reuters) – African leaders condemned Somalia’s al Shabaab rebels on Sunday at a Kampala summit officials say will beef up an African force fighting the group behind attacks that killed 76 people in Uganda this month.

The African Union (AU) meeting in the Ugandan capital, the site of two suicide attacks on soccer fans watching the World Cup final on television, has put the Somali crisis at the top of the agenda and more than 30 African leaders are under pressure to respond.

The summit’s main debating point has been the mandate of an AU peacekeeping force of 6,300, which has been responsible for preventing Somalia’s government falling to rebel attacks in the capital Mogadishu.

The force is made of up of Ugandan and Burundian troops and that, together with allegations that it has killed civilians with indiscriminate shelling, was the reason given by the rebels for the attack.

Delegates told Reuters a cap of 8,100 on troop levels would be lifted during the meeting. A more contentious possibility was that the force, known as AMISOM, be given permission to go after the rebels. It can now fight only when attacked.

AU Commission Chairman Jean Ping called the al Shabaab attacks “despicable” and said the continental body was ready to step up its response.

“The commission is already planning the next phases in the deployment of AMISOM in terms of the enlarged mandate, increased troop strength and appropriate equipment,” he said.

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan said his government condemned the attack and called al Shabaab “extremists”. Nigeria has pledged in the past to send troops to Somalia, but has yet to do so.

GOOD INFORMATION

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni told delegates his government was getting “very good information” from suspects arrested after the bombings.

Diplomats at the summit told Reuters the heightened rhetoric might be a sign the AU was ready to give AMISOM permission to chase down al Shabaab, a group with links to al Qaeda which wants to impose its own harsh version of sharia law in Somalia.

Some countries are against the policy change, citing evidence that AMISOM has killed civilians. They argue such incidents could be a recruitment boon to al Shabaab, which controls parts of the capital and much of southern Somalia.

At least six civilians were killed and 20 wounded in Mogadishu on Sunday when a shell landed in a busy market. Witnesses said they had no idea where it had been fired from.

Since the start of the Islamist insurgency in Somalia in 2007, more than 21,000 civilians have been killed and rights groups have accused all sides in the conflict of war crimes.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said his government would share intelligence with Uganda and help catch the bombers. Dozens of U.S. forensic experts are combing the bomb sites in Kampala.

“We are now bound not only by friendship and partnership but also by a shared loss, a shared threat, a shared grief,” Holder told the African leaders.

“These acts are nothing more than reprehensible acts of cowardice inspired by a radical and corrupt ideology that subverts the peaceful teachings of a great religion.”

The AU said on Friday Guinea would send a battalion of troops to join AMISOM. The East African regional bloc IGAD last month pledged to send another 2,000 troops. That would take levels beyond the cap of 8,100.

NZ watchdog secures record payout to fund investors

June 22 (Reuters) – New Zealand’s competition watchdog has secured a record compensation deal for investors over allegations that ANZ National Bank (ANZ.AX) and ING misrepresented the risk involved in two retail funds. A total of NZ$45 million ($32 million) will be paid to investors affected by the freezing of two ING funds in March 2008, in return for waiving legal action, the Commerce Commission said on Tuesday.

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At the time they were frozen, the funds were worth about NZ$533 million, and together had around 15,000 individual investors.

“In the Commission’s view, representations made by ANZ and ING concerning the degree of investment risk in the funds were likely to be misleading in that the actual risk was understated,” Commerce Commission Chairman Mark Berry said in a statement.

ANZ, which owns the New Zealand business of Dutch financial group ING (ING.AS), has said it already made available more than NZ$500 million to investors in the funds, after it offered a settlement in 2009.

“We apologise to those investors who felt we had misinformed them,” ANZ National Bank’s Acting Chief Executive Steven Fyfe said in a statement.

“While we do not agree with all of the Commission’s views we do agree that it is in the best interests of investors to avoid a lengthy court process,” Fyfe said.

Both the ING Diversified Yield Fund and ING Regular Income Fund invested largely in collateralised debt obligations, which were exposed to the U.S. subprime lending market, which collapsed, triggering the global financial crisis. ($1=NZ$1.41) (Reporting by Adrian Bathgate; Editing by Ed Davies and Ian Geoghegan))

Afghanistan Electoral Commission rejects some votes due to irregularities

Kabul, Sep. 7 (ANI): Afghanistan’s electoral commission has rejected results from hundreds of presidential polling stations due to “irregularities”.

According to a Sky News report, the Independent Election Commission (IEC) has thrown out results from 447 voting sites because of irregularities.

The IEC has investigated over 650 claims of serious violations during and after the August 20 vote.

The commission has the power to nullify the results from districts or provinces, or even call for a new election, if it finds large-scale fraud.

President Karzai is currently leading the polls with a 48 percent vote, while his main rival and former foreign minister Dr. Abdullah has got over 33 percent of the vote.

Commission chairman Daoud Ali Najafi has insisted the commission was unbiased in fulfilling its duties throughout the process. (ANI)

Sam Pitroda calls for ICT’s application for development

New Delhi, Aug. 26 (ANI): Knowledge Commission Chairman Sam Pitroda has called for the application of information and communication technology (ICT) in the field of education, health, environment and agriculture in order to bring in a generational change among the Indian masses.

“The key in terms of what next is to focus on five to six key areas. My preference would be health, education, energy and environment. Pretty broad four to five big areas,” Pitroda said, delivering a keynote address at a function to mark the silver jubilee of Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DOT).

He also noted that information technology (IT) should be used as a tool to enhance the education sector in the country.

On this score, he called for IT and ICT to supplement and complement each other for positive results.

“They key is we need to use IT in a very different way to build productivity and efficiency in education. Learning models have to change. We need to take advantage of available IT infrastructure to really enhance our teaching as well adds to our teachers resource,” Pitroda, added.

C-DOT is the premier organisation engaged in research and development (R andD) of IT in India and it was set up on August 25, 1984. (ANI)

Russia signs nuclear deal with Jordan

MOSCOW: Russia on Friday signed an agreement with Jordan to build nuclear power plants, desalination and research and training facilities in the West Asian kingdom.

The 10-year deal signed here by Russia’s RosAtom nuclear corporation CEO Sergei Kiriyenko and Jordanian Atomic Energy Commission chairman Khaled Toukan also stipulates cooperation in the production and use of nuclear materials.

“This agreement is the beginning of major strategic cooperation between the two countries. We intend to cooperate in the construction of nuclear power plants… and plan to build four plants in Jordan in the coming decades,” Kiriyenko was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti news agency.

Construction of a nuclear power plant for production of electricity and a sea water desalination station are among the important projects to be executed under the deal, Jordan’s nuclear official said.

Russia will also partner Jordan in Uranium processing under the agreement, the official added.

40 years of Tarapur Atomic Power Station commemorated

Tarapur (Maharashtra), Apr 2 (ANI): Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Anil Kakodkar hailed 40 successful years of Tarapur Atomic Power Station (TAPS) in Maharashtra.

India’s first atomic power plant, which turned 40 on April 1, is still going strong running 100 per cent to its capacity.

Addressing mediapersons on the occasion, Anil said that the current Atomic Energy Act envisages a government company to handle the nuclear power generation.

“Now within the ambit of this current Act, I think it is theoretically possible for anybody to join in Power Corporation of India Limited (PCIL). With PCIL holding more than 51 per cent share and this would enable the necessary experience under Indian conditions which I view as very important,” said Kakodkar.
TAPS was set up in 1963 with two boiling water reactor units of 160 MW each with cooperation of the USA and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), incidentally the first of its kind in Asia.

Later, these were upgraded to 540 MW each with Pressurised Heavy Water Reactor (PHWR), executed by Indian companies.

With a total capacity of 1400 MW, Tarapur is the largest nuclear power station in India.

India’s nuclear programme has gained much prominence after it signed a potentially lucrative agreement with the USA on October 10, 2008 that would allow India to buy American civil nuclear technology for the first time in three decades. (ANI)

Indonesia issues fatwa against smoking

Jakarta, Jan. 27 (ANI): The Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) has issued an edict forbidding children, pregnant women and MUI members from smoking.

The edict, which was issued in a meeting here last Sunday, also bans smoking in public places.

Antara News Agency quoted the council’s Edict Commission chairman Amin Suma in West Sumatera Monday as saying that MUI decided in the meeting that smoking for Muslims was between haram (forbidden) and makruh (objectionable).

He said that MUI would later formulate the form of sanctions against council members who smoked.

Suma said that the MUI meeting agreed on two rulings, namely one which banned smoking for children, pregnant women, in public places and MUI members, and the other which states that smoking was between haram and makhruh.

He said the adoption of the edict was based on the emergence of differences in opinions on whether smoking for Muslims was allowed or forbidden.

He said the public to act against smokers should not use the decision taken by MUI. (ANI)