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The Inzu Ya Masaba cultural Institution leader, Mr John Amram Wagabyalire, with EU officials during the launch of second phase of Civil Society in Uganda Support Programme (CUSP) II  at Court view hotel in Mbale at the weekend. PHOTO | FRED WAMBEDE

What you need to know:

  • The head of programme of the Civil Society in Uganda Support Programme (CUSP) II, Mr Tassilo Von Droste, said the programme will strengthen the financial and governance capacity of CSOs to effectively engage in development processes at the national and local levels.

The European Union and the German government have allocated Shs63 billion to support the capacity building of civil society organisations (CSOs) in the country. 

The head of programme of the Civil Society in Uganda Support Programme (CUSP) II, Mr Tassilo Von Droste, said the programme will strengthen the financial and governance capacity of CSOs to effectively engage in development processes at the national and local levels.

Mr Droste made the remarks during the launch of the second phase of CUSP which is co-funded by the EU and the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development and implemented by the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ) in Mbale at the weekend.

The programme is aimed at among others promoting the inclusion of marginalised groups and also fostering cooperation between state institutions and CSOs in planning, implementing and monitoring development processes in order to achieve sustainable development goals.

Mr Droste said under the programme, the beneficiary 150 CSOs will be supported in using digital tools to promote accountability and revenue mobilisation skills.

“This will ensure that vulnerable groups that are often overlooked can have a say in important development processes. They will ensure that no one is left behind,” he said.

Mr Nicolas Gonze, the team leader of governance and social inclusion at the EU, said they are building on phase 1 of CUSP to make sure participation in development processes is inclusive.

“We want participation in development to be as inclusive as possible with the focus on youth, women and people with disabilities,” Mr Gonze, said. 

Mr Gonze said under CUSP 1, CSO participation was promoted in the development processes in 78 districts across the country.

“About 1,635 CSO employees were trained on institutional development, strategic planning management and mobilisation,” Mr Gonze said, adding that 62 CSOs were developed and 79 capacity plans were implemented.

The executive director of Karamoja Women Umbrella Organisation (Kawou), Mr Thomas Odelok, said after training, more women participated in the 2021 General Election.

Mr Stephen Okello, the executive director of the Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) Bureau, said most of CSOs in the country do not last long.

“The biggest challenge NGOs or CSOS face in this country is that they have a very weak sustainability. They start very well but collapse after a few years, so a programme like this helps to strengthen their capacity,” he said.

He added that in 2019, they conducted a verification and validation exercise and found that out of 14,207 NGOs, only 2,000 were active and in existence.

“By the time we finished the exercise the number had dropped to 2,000 as we talk now, the number that on the register is about 4,000. Many of them are closing for different reasons but the main is capacity challenge, “he said.

The Inzu Ya Masaba cultural Institution leader, Mr John Amram Wagabyalire, asked the EU to fund more programmes geared towards promoting the welfare of the people. By Fred Wambede, Daily Monitor

 President Emerson Mnangagwa of Zimbabwe pictured in Harare in 2017. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images© Provided by The Guardian

In South Africa, as across the African Commonwealth countries, Saturday’s coronation of King Charles III prompted mixed reactions.

There was much interest in Pretty Yende, the South African soprano who sang at the beginning of the ceremony, and some high-profile public figures sent their best wishes to the monarch. 

Thuli Madonsela, a popular lawyer and activist widely respected following her leadership of the country’s public corruption watchdog, offered “Congratulations to HM King Charles and Queen Camilla on their coronation” in a tweet. “It was wonderful to see our peerless opera star ⁦@PrettyYende shine during the coronation,” Madonsela said.

However, others took a more combative stance, with the Economic Freedom Fighters, a populist radical leftwing party, calling for Britain to return the world’s largest diamond, known as the Star of Africa, which is set in the royal sceptre held by the king on Saturday.

The diamond, which weighs 530 carats, was discovered in South Africa in 1905 and presented to the British monarchy by the colonial government in the country, which was then under British rule.

The EFF said on Sunday that the attendance at the ceremony of the ruling African National Congress, which sent its foreign minister, Naledi Pandor, “legitimised the brutality of the British monarchy against the very people [the ANC] was elected to serve”.

“Today, 116 years later, the King of England … continues in the pompous steps of his predecessors flaunting the stolen Star of Africa at his coronation. Apartheid criminal Louis Botha handed over the Star of Africa to the ruthless British colonisers in 1907 … The British monarchy had no dignified grounds to accept it, let alone still parade it as British glory 116 years later,” the party said in a statement.

In the coastal city of Durban, expatriate British communities planned a special church service on Sunday followed by a picnic or a braai, a traditional South African barbecue. 

“I think people want to be part of an important moment in history,” said Illa Thompson, one of the organisers of the festivities.

Few African media organisations had sufficient resources to cover events in London themselves, instead relying on international press agencies. Many news websites ran galleries of photographs depicting events but with little comment on them.

In some countries, attention focused on the presence of controversial African leaders. In Zimbabwe, some alarm was expressed at the presence of Emerson Mnangagwa, the president.

Mnangagwa, who won a contested election in 2018 and whose government has been accused of widespread human rights abuses, said on taking power he wanted Zimbabwe to rejoin the Commonwealth but then balked at the necessary democratic and economic reforms.

 
 

“We are concerned when countries which claim to be champions of democracy choose to entertain despots like Mnangagwa,” said Obert Masaraure, a trade unionist and pro-democracy activist in Zimbabwe. “It is now clear that nations are now choosing business deals ahead of people. The British government is keen on laying hands on Zimbabwe’s raw materials and no longer care about soiled human rights record of Mnangagwa.”

In Kenya, Herman Manyora, a political analyst and journalism professor at the University of Nairobi, said many Kenyans had been put off by “the torture during colonialism, because of the oppression, because of detentions, because of killings, because of the alienation of our land”.

But, as in South Africa, reactions have been varied with some, often from older generations, arguing that the Commonwealth still has some relevance on the continent.

In Uganda, the political analyst Asuman Bisiika said British culture continued to have a strong influence on young people in the east African country, especially those who follow English football. There is also a lot of goodwill for Queen Elizabeth II, who died in September after 70 years on the throne.

“It’s not about caring for the British monarchy,” Bisiika said. “It’s about relating.”

The inclusion of Tiwa Savage in the lineup for the coronation concert on Sunday also prompted mixed reactions in the Nigerian singer’s homeland, with some criticism. Others welcomed the inclusion of “the Queen of Afrobeats” in the royal occasion.  by Jason Burke Africa correspondent, Guardian

Tanzania's anti-corruption watchdog said it intends to employ 322 officers to reinforce the fight against corruption in the country.

Salum Rashid Hamduni, the director general of the Prevention and Combating of Corruption Bureau (PCCB), said President Samia Suluhu Hassan has authorized the recruitment of the 322 officers.

Speaking shortly after he had inaugurated a PCCB office in the Kiteto district in the Manyara region, Hamduni said the fight against corruption called for participation by all members of the public.

Hamduni added that the fight against corruption should be reinforced because it affected the economic development of the country.

Source(s): Xinhua News Agency

 

A new report by a UN Panel of Experts on South Sudan says Juba has breached an arms embargo imposed on it in 2018 after it appeared to have recently procured new armoured personnel carriers.

The report seen by Radio Tamazuj reveals that at least 10 armoured personnel carriers, distinct in both design and colour from those purchased in violation of the arms embargo in late 2021 or early 2022, were flagged off by President Salva Kiir for a regional peacekeeping mission to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

“They are also distinct from those known to have been purchased by the South Sudan People’s Defense Forces before the imposition of the arms embargo by the Security Council with a resolution,” the report said.

According to the UN Panel, a commercially available vehicle that matches those observed in South Sudan and is often marketed as the Titan-S, a highly modified and armoured version of a commercially available civilian vehicle, was identified.

‘‘As several companies appear to sell the vehicle in question, however, the Panel has not been able to confirm the supply chain by which the vehicles entered South Sudan,” the report said.

“The Panel did not receive responses to its request for assistance from three relevant Member States. No inspection reports have been submitted by Member States further to paragraphs 7 to 10 of resolution 2428 (2018) since its adoption and subsequent renewals,” it added.

The UN Panel has urged the international community to take action against those who are responsible for the breaches of the arms embargo.

A supplementary budget of $6.69 million was allocated to the deployment of the South Sudan People’s Defence Forces contingent to the East African Community forces.

“Original South Sudan People’s Defence Forces documents reviewed by the Panel indicate that troops deployed as part of the mission are being paid in line with current South Sudan People’s Defence Forces salary scales. As such, salaries likely account for only a fraction of the allocated funds. South Sudan People’s Defence Forces officials have stated that funds were mostly allocated to “equipment,” the report noted.

Military Spokesman Major General Lul Ruai could not immediately be reached for comment.

In 2018, the UN Security Council imposed an arms embargo on South Sudan to end a prevailing civil war at that time.

The government of South Sudan has, over the years, been lobbying members of the UN Security Council to have the embargo lifted.

The UN expert report also noted that continued delay by South Sudan authorities to implement provisions of the 2018 peace agreement could plunge the country into further chaos. - Radio Tamazuj

People walk next to a house destroyed by floods in the village of Nyamukubi, South Kivu province, in the Democratic Republic of Congo

The death toll from flash floods and landslides in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo has risen beyond 200, with many more people still missing, according to local authorities in the province of South Kivu.

Thomas Bakenge, administrator of Kalehe, the worst-hit territory, told reporters on the scene Saturday that 203 bodies had been recovered so far, but that efforts to find others were continuing.

In the village of Nyamukubi, where hundreds of homes were washed away, rescue workers and survivors dug through the ruins Saturday looking for more bodies in the mud. Villagers wept as they gathered around some of the bodies recovered so far, which lay on the grass covered in muddy cloths near a rescue workers post.

Grieving survivor Anuarite Zikujuwa said she had lost her entire family, including her in-laws, as well as many of her neighbours. 

"The whole village has been turned into a wasteland. There's only stones left, and we can't even tell where our land once was," she said.

Michake Ntamana, a rescue worker helping look for and bury the dead, said villagers were trying to identify and collect the bodies of loved ones found so far. He said some bodies washed down from villages higher in the hills were being buried shrouded just in leaves off the trees.

"It's truly sad because we have nothing else here," he said.

Rivers broke their banks in villages in the territory of Kalehe, close to the shores of Lake Kivu on Thursday. Authorities have reported scores of people injured. One survivor told AP the flash floods took everyone by surprise.

South Kivu Gov. Théo Ngwabidje visited the area to see the destruction for himself. He posted on his Twitter account that the provincial government had dispatched medical, shelter and food supplies. Several main roads to the affected area have been made impassable by the rains, hampering the relief efforts.

President Felix Tshisekedi has declared a national day of mourning on Monday to honour the victims, and the central government is sending a crisis management team to South Kivu to support the provincial government.

Heavy rains in recent days have brought misery to thousands in East Africa, with parts of Uganda and Kenya also seeing heavy rainfall. Flooding and landslides in Rwanda, which borders Congo, left 129 people dead earlier this week.

Local government official Bakenge told AP, "This is the fourth time that such damage has been caused by the same rivers. Not 10 years pass without them causing enormous damage." Written by VOA, The Observer

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