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British navy kills two Somali 'pirates' in shoot out

LONDON (AFP) — Two suspected Somali pirates were killed in an exchange of fire with the British navy, the defence ministry said on Wednesday.

The HMS Cumberland was conducting a routine NATO-led patrol in the Gulf of Aden on Tuesday when it spotted a dhow which had been identified in an attempt to hijack a Danish vessel, the MV Powerful, earlier in the day.

The defence ministry said in a statement that the British ship had used “non-forcible methods” in an attempt to stop the dhow, and boats were then launched to circle and intercept the vessel.

“These boats were fired at from the dhow and the crews returned fire in self defence,” the statement said.

“Two foreign nationals, believed to be Somali pirates, were shot and killed in self defence.”

A Yemeni man was also found injured and later died, although the defence ministry said it was unclear whether he had sustained his injuries in the firefight “or in a previous incident involving the pirates”.

Piracy is rife in the region where Somalia’s northeastern tip juts into the Indian Ocean, on a key maritime route leading to the Suez Canal.

The pirates are equipped with speedboats and armed with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades.

A Turkish-flagged tanker with a 14-man crew became the latest victim of the pirates when it was hijacked off Yemen on Wednesday, the Anatolia news agency reported.

Last month, a maritime watchdog said Somali pirates were responsible for nearly a third of all reported attacks on ships.

HMS Cumberland is the current British contribution to the NATO mission in the Maritime Security Patrol Area (MSPA), which provides security to shipping crossing the Gulf of Aden.


Top Kenya athletes to take part in Great Ethiopia Run

A group of promising Kenyan athletes, Britain’s Mo Farah and Sweden’s Mustafa Mohammed will lead the foreign charge at next month’s Toyota Great Ethiopian Race.

Gilbert Yegon, who finished third in the half marathon race at the Standard Chartered Nairobi Marathon with 1:02:43, will team up with Raymond Tanui in the men’s race. Tanui won the Bath Half Marathon in 1:05:21 in March.

In the women’s race, Kenyans’ hopes rest on Valentine Kipketer and Joyce Kandia.

Kipketer finished fifth (17:50) over 5.35km in the Diekirch Eurocross, IAAF Cross Country Permit meeting in Luxemborg in February. She won the 15km women’s race during the Chepkoilel Cross-Country meeting a fortnight ago with 53:47.83 reading on the clock.

Kandia won the 2006 Belfast Marathon (2:43:11) and last month, she breezed to the tape in 34:30 to take the Baxters River Ness 10km in Scotland.

The Kenyan quartet will try to go one better than their compatriots Nathan Naibei and Lineth Chepkirui who recorded second-place finishes in the race in 2005 and 2006.

European Cup 5,000m champion, Farah, is training in Addis Ababa in preparation for the European Cross-Country Championships in Brussels.

Farah arrived in Addis at the end of October and plans to return to Britain at the end of November.

With Deriba Merga (fourth at the Beijing Olympics) and Tsegaye Kebede (Olympic Marathon bronze) as winners of the race in 2006 and last year, the event has become an important development race for upcoming Ethiopian athletes.

Medallist

More than 400 top club runners are expected to confirm their entry in the next 10 days, alongside the 32,000 entered.

Meanwhile, a busy season awaits athletes in the North Rift region as Athletics Kenya released a calendar of events for the branch, adds Joseph Ngure.

The branch meeting was chaired by national assistant secretary, Ibrahim Hussein. The season kicks off this weekend with the Tegla Loroupe 10km road race at Makutano Stadium, Kapenguria.

The Tuskys Wareng Cross-country will be held at Huruma open ground in Eldoret on November 30 and the Baringo Half-Marathon, sponsored by Safaricom, on December 6 in Kabarnet.

Shoe For Africa, a women’s exclusive event, will be held on December 20 in Iten with Eldoret hosting the sixth Kenya Commercial Bank/AK cross-country on January 10 at Kazi Mingi.

Other events: Discovery Kenya Cross-country on January 25 (Eldoret Sports Club), Discovery Kenya Half-marathon February 1 (Eldoret Town) and District Cross-country championships February 7.

The Standard

Nigerian communication satellite not lost in space, battery is flat

By Felix Onuah

ABUJA, Nov 12 (Reuters) – Nigeria’s government said on Wednesday that its $340 million communications satellite was not lost in space, as reported by the local media, but that it was simply suffering from a flat battery.

The Nigerian Communication Satellite, or NIGCOMSAT-1, blasted off from a launch pad in China in May 2007 to great fanfare, with Nigeria hoping it would offer advanced telecoms, broadcasting and broadband multimedia services for 15 years.

Minister of state for Science and Technology Alhassan Zaku said engineers at ground stations in Abuja and China had noticed the satellite’s solar-powered battery was not recharging and feared it could smash into other satellites if left unrepaired.

“After looking at the options we decided that the best thing to do was to park it, like you park a car,” Zaku said.

“If it wasn’t parked and it lost all its power there would be no energy to even move it … and it would be like a loose cannon and would keep rolling about and hit other satellites in the orbit,” he told reporters.

Nigerian newspapers had reported NIGCOMSAT-1 was missing from orbit.

The satellite was supposed to make Africa’s most populous nation a technological hub, saving broadband users and phone users hundreds of millions of dollars a year and enabling Internet access to remote rural villages.

Critics say the project, estimated to have cost the government 40 billion naira ($340 million), has done little to improve communications, with Internet connections notoriously unreliable and among the most expensive in the region.

Zaku said the satellite was insured and that it would be replaced if it could not be repaired. He said customers had been assured that television, radio and Internet services affected by the problem would be re-routed.

Nigerian Internet users have already been battling with service problems after damage to the South Atlantic Terminal III (SAT-3) underwater cable, the main gateway to the country for international calls and Internet connections.

Nigeria’s formerly state-owned telecoms firm Nitel said last month it had invited foreign firms to help it fix the cable. (For full Reuters Africa coverage and to have your say on the top issues, visit: http://africa.reuters.com/ ) (Writing by Nick Tattersall)


Kenya's president invites Obama to visit

Among several conversations he held with world leaders Tuesday, U.S. president-elect Barack Obama spoke with Mwai Kibaki, the president of his late father’s country, Kenya.

A statement issued by the Kenyan presidency Wednesday said Mr. Kibaki told his soon-to-be American counterpart that his election victory had been received with immense pride and gratification.

The Kenyan president is quoted as saying that even though Kenyans know Mr. Obama holds his allegiance to Americans, they are confident Kenya will always have a special place in his heart.

Mr. Kibaki also invited the president-elect to visit Kenya at his earliest convenience. Mr. Obama has made three previous visits to Kenya, most recently in 2006.

His election victory on November 4 sparked widespread celebrations in Kenya, where a national holiday was declared two days later.

The new U.S. president has many relatives in Kenya, but has had little contact with them.

Mr. Obama’s father went from herding goats in the Kenyan town of Kogelo to studying in Hawaii and at the prestigious Harvard university in the United States, but spent very little time with his son.

VOA News

The U.S. FBI to assist South Africa fight crime

By Roy McKenzie – News24

Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA – The American Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is to assist South Africa in fighting crime, the US Ambassador to South Africa, Eric Bost, has confirmed.

This comes after an ANC delegation – including ANC president Jacob Zuma, who is widely expected to be South Africa’s next president – visited the US at the invitation of the American government at the end of October.

During the week-long trip, Zuma met with US government officials and other organisations. The purpose of the visit was to strengthen ties and discuss areas of further co-operation. Zuma also spoke at the Council of Foreign Relations in Washington DC.

One of those meetings was with the FBI, to discuss what assistance it can give to support South Africa’s efforts to address crime.

“I’m very optimistic. We had a wonderful conversation with the FBI that lasted an hour,” Bost said.

Crime ‘a threat’ to SA

Bost outlined how crime is a threat to the country. Not only is it unpleasant, but it also compromises investment and tourism, especially ahead of 2010, he said.

Bost also recounted how he had met with former safety and security minister Charles Nqakula over two years ago, and had offered the US government’s support in fighting crime. “I told him crime was a real challenge for South Africa, why don’t you tell me what you need, it won’t cost you anything.”

Bost said he had offered training and other assistance, but had never received an answer.

“But our meeting with the FBI went very well, and we are now well on our way to provide support. We’ve wasted two-and-a-half years, so we want to work on this.”

The FBI has already assisted in training South African police on how to handle terrorism financing and money laundering ahead of the 2010 Fifa World Cup.

Bost also said that the US sees South Africa as an important strategic partner, and it is important to strengthen the relationship with South Africa, adding that Zuma also sees this as an important strategic relationship.

– News24


Uganda's population increased by 1 million last year

By Anthony Bugembe | The New Vision

UGANDA’S population increased last year by more than a million, according to a report.

The population, the report added, will reach 29.6 million, up from last year’s 28.4 million. At 3.2%, Uganda’s is the seventh fastest growing population in the world.

The fertility rate has only decreased slightly over the past five years from 6.7% to 6.9%.

On average, a Ugandan woman gives birth to 6.7 children. As a result, the population is expected to hit 38 million by 2015.

The number of people living in urban areas has also increased from 3.7 million to 3.9 million.

The report called for deliberate effort to ensure a sustainable population growth rate.

The annual document, entitled The State of Uganda Population Report 2008, was launched in Kampala yesterday. It was compiled by the Population Secretariat.

It is intended to draw attention towards building a quality population. “We must ensure that we achieve a quality population,” said Charles Zirarema, the secretariat’s acting director.

Commenting on the report, Janet Jackson, the UN Population Fund representative to Uganda, said Uganda’s cultural heritage was diverse.

“So too must be the views, practices and beliefs about sexual and reproductive health,” he said. “More needs to be understood about what different groups of people think, act and believe.”

Zirarema noted the report explores the interplay between culture, gender and human rights and how they interface with population growth, HIV/AIDS, armed conflict, low access to reproductive health information and water.

The unmet need for family planning has increased drastically over the past five years from 35% to 41%. The number of married people using contraceptives has only slightly increased from 22.8 in 2002 to 23.7.

The number of pregnant women having supervised deliveries has increased from 38% in 2002 to the current 41%.

Zirarema said 12% of women in the productive age group are undernourished, while 38% of children below five years are stunted. “We should reverse the trend,” he said.

In order to attain equitable development, notes the report, individuals must exercise control over their sexual lives. Traditionally, a woman’s status is largely measured by her capacity to reproduce, hence the pressure to have more children.

“Most families in Uganda still highly value producing several sons, who would continue the lineage of the family,” the report observes.

Generally, the health indicators have remained the same over the last two years. The changes, however, over the past five years are noticeable.

The infant mortality rate decreased from 88 in 2002 to the current 76 per 1,000 live births. Maternal mortality stands at 435 per 100,000 births, down from 505 in 2002. The prevalence rate remains at 6.4%. The main limitation to the fight against AIDS is cultural behaviour. Early forced marriages and men’s extra-marital sexual relations are key in spreading the virus. The national response, according to the report, should involve reshaping societal and cultural norms and resources to contribute to HIV prevention.

The HIV prevalence is highest among females in the 30-34 age group. Among men, the prevalence is highest among 40-44 year-olds.

The major noticeable sex discrepancy is the HIV prevalence among children (15-19 years).