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Photo via ZBC News

 

South Sudan Minister for Presidential Affairs, Dr Barnaba Benjamin has paid a courtesy call on President Emmerson Mnangagwa, where he delivered a letter from South Sudan President Salva Kiir.

Emerging from the closed-door meeting with President Mnangagwa, South Sudanese Minister for Presidential Affairs, Dr Barnaba Benjamin said his country appreciates Zimbabwe’s continued support.

“I brought a special letter from our President to his excellency President Emmerson Mnangagwa. This underscores the great relations that the government and people of Zimbabwe has had to the people of South Sudan. We got support and today we are the new nation we are and the President was thanking Zimbabwe for contributing to our dignity,” Dr Benjamin said.

The envoy also sought Zimbabwe’s support for the lifting of the arms embargo placed on South Sudan by the United Nations.

“I brought a message from the President we are seeking support from the President of Zimbabwe through institutions like SADC.  AU because the UN system has had an arms embargo on the republic of South Sudan. It is putting a lot of difficulties in the implementation of a peace process. We have already trained over 53 000 troops but because of the embargo we are not able to purchase the equipment and arms they need.”

Dr Benjamin also highlighted that his country would like to expand areas of cooperation with Zimbabwe in a number of key sectors, including trade.

“We thought we should also expand our relations in areas of trade, education and investment. Already we have students who have graduated from here,” he noted.

The South Sudanese envoy indicated that his country is looking forward to a visit from President Mnangagwa and emphasized on the need for solidarity among African countries. - Josephine Mugiyo, ZBC News

 

Burundian troops have allegedly been identified in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Witnesses from the town of Lemera which is located in the province of South Kivu claim burundian forces entered illegaly into the Congolese region last December. According to Lemera area's chief who spoke to the AFP, Burundian soldiers were chasing the Red-Tabara, a Burundian rebel group which is based in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The group is responsible for the Bujumbura airport attack that occured on September 21, injuring 50. Red Tabara was formed in 2011 with the objective of overthrowing the government, which it says does not respect the rule of law.

The spokesperson for the Congolese armee in the South-Kivu province has not confirmed nor denied the allegation.

In restive eastern Congo, the presence of foreign military has sparked outcry in the past. Last month clashes between residents and the police broke out in Goma, the capital of North Kivu province, as rumors ermerged suggesting Rwandan soldiers had been charged with maintaining law and order.

The region suffers from decades of instability stired up by the RED-Tabara rebels and other military groups in that part of the Democratic Republic of Congo. - Africanews with AFP

Children and families in Burundi, Africa using stationery and supplies sent to them from the Coral and Blue Paper Co. in Saratoga Springs. Photo Maurice Karenzo and Ashley Campbell

 

SARATOGA SPRINGS – When Ashley Campbell sent Maurice Karenzo, a teacher friend of hers in the Republic of Burundi, stationery for his students, she didn’t expect what happened next.

The Coral and Blue Paper Co. founder figured it was just a kind gesture to a friend, but later learned from Karenzo – who she met through a global faith network online – that something “really amazing” had unfolded as a result.

“The kids are starting to write thank-you notes and tell stories in their letters and do artwork. And we've never had this before,” she said Karenzo told her.

Karenzo’s students in the east-central African country were taken by the simple, elementary-lined stationery because blank paper and art supplies are hard to come by for them. They viewed it as a “novelty,” Campbell said, something she was completely unaware of.

The students’ immense gratitude and positive response motivated Campbell and Karenzo to partner up and do more. They started a mission to bring art supplies and paper to all of Burundi through her company.

Today, a year later, the two friends have provided Burundi villages with loads of stationery and supplies, including writing instruments, clothes and more. Since the initial allocation, Karenzo was able to recruit four more teachers to help distribute materials to areas far from the school. 

Campbell raises money locally in the Capital Region for her counterparts in Burundi to buy provisions within the country every couple of months. 

St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, Campbell’s church, organized efforts to support the Burundi mission. 

Brenda Streed, the church’s missions team leader, works within the community to spread the word about Coral and Blue’s global work and raise contributions for it. The church recently raised about $1,900 to send over for Christmas.

“It's a way for us in a very small way to just help those who are less fortunate,” Streed said.

Campbell initially bought the supplies here in the U.S. and shipped them out, but realized it was less expensive and more beneficial to purchase or print what was needed in Burundi to support its economy. And for whatever reason, the virus hasn’t caused severe supply chain disruptions there as it has domestically, Campbell noted, which has helped the operation run smoothly. 

“It's been like something I've never seen before. It's been beautiful and amazing,” Campbell said.

Karenzo sends Campbell newsletters with photos and notes about how students are putting the goods they receive to use. 

Children use the stationery to draw pictures and write thank-you notes. Several have used the cards to tell their parents how grateful they are for all they have. Others have used the paper as a therapeutic tool to deal with trauma stemming from a series of wars and instability in the region.

Several have written down the stories of their experiences and later read them aloud to one another, which has helped them cope, according to Campbell. She can recall a couple of instances when children wrote about their aspirations to become doctors and help others hurt by war.

Without many formal schools and several outdoor classrooms, you can see how the children will sit on rocks or lean on the ground to draw and write, she noted.

“They don't take those things for granted there. They really appreciate them. They put them to good use; the teachers do everything that they can to make sure that the kids are taken care of,” Campbell said.

In his latest letter, Karenzo said the effort reached about 116 families and 812 children, giving them clothes, shoes and sweets during December.

"Students have received with joy the supplies because they are in critical life of poverty caused by civil war passed in this country. They love people who help them because they don't usually expect it," Karenzo wrote to the Times Union in an email. "Supplies show them that there is someone who thinks and takes care of them."

Campbell acknowledged there are people closer to home and all over that need help. While she understands that, she said the need in Burundi is what “fell” into her lap.

“It feels like the world is just not that big,” she said. “I realized just how small the world actually is and how much we can impact people in another country by something as small as sending a gift, and then how easy it is actually to help people in other countries.”  - Shayla Colon, Times Union

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