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Wednesday, 4 June 2014


Obama to hold talks with Ukraine's Poroshenko in Warsaw.


President Obama met US and Polish airmen on his arrival in Warsaw.
US President Barack Obama is to discuss economic support for Ukraine when he meets President-elect Petro Poroshenko in Warsaw.

Mr Obama has said he will offer US support as Kiev tries to settle a gas bill with Russian supplier Gazprom or risk a cut in supply.
Ukraine's struggling economy has been in recession since the middle of 2012.
Mr Obama is in Poland for celebrations marking the 25th anniversary of the end of communism there.
But his visit has taken on extra significance following Russia's annexation of the Crimean peninsula in March. The move has left East-West relations at their lowest ebb since the Cold War.
Mr Obama is seeking to reassure former Soviet states that Washington will support them in the event of any Russian "provocation".
On Tuesday he pledged $1bn (£600m) to boost military deployments to Europe in response to Russian actions in Ukraine.



Petro Poroshenko, right, has already met US Secretary of State John Kerry in Warsaw.
 
Nato has also promised to bolster its defence capabilities.
The BBC's Adam Easton in Warsaw says Mr Obama chose to come to Poland for its symbolic value.
In a speech in Warsaw on Wednesday, he is expected to say that 25 years ago it faced similar problems to those facing Kiev today, but overcame them.
The message is that with the West's support, Ukraine can too, our correspondent says. 


 Russia's Gazprom says Ukraine still owes it almost $2.5bn (£1.5bn) for gas

Earlier, Mr Obama said he would offer Mr Poroshenko US support for the Ukrainian economy to help ensure it can get through the winter if Russian gas supplies are cut in a row over payment.
"I want to hear from him (Poroshenko) what he thinks would be most helpful," Mr Obama said.
"We're going to spend a lot of time on the economics of Ukraine."
He said Moscow could rebuild the trust it once enjoyed, but said that "further Russian provocation" would be met with further costs for Russia, including possible further sanctions.
Moscow has been accused of supporting armed separatists in eastern Ukraine, something it strongly denies.
"Russia has a responsibility to engage constructively with the Ukrainian government in Kiev, to prevent the flow of militants and weapons into eastern Ukraine," he said.
Mr Obama is on a three-country visit to Europe that takes him next to Belgium for a meeting of the G7 major industrial nations and then on to France for D-Day commemorations.
Mr Poroshenko is making his first official visit abroad since winning the 25 May election.

 

Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Obama to urge Europe to keep up pressure on Russia
FILE - This May 28, 2011, file photo shows U.S. President Barack Obama during an arrival ceremony at the presidential palace in Warsaw, Poland. Monday, June 2, 2014, Obama begins a four-day trip to Poland, Belgium, and France against the backdrop of successful national elections in Ukraine. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama will urge European leaders this week to keep up pressure on Russia over its threatening moves in Ukraine, while seeking to assuage fears from Poland and other NATO allies that the West could slip back into a business-as-usual relationship with Moscow.

Obama's four day trip to Poland, Belgium and France comes against the backdrop of successful national elections in Ukraine and signs that Russia is moving most of its troops off its shared border with the former Soviet republic. Yet violence continues to rage in eastern Ukrainian cities and there remains deep uncertainty about whether Ukraine's new president-elect can stabilize his country.

U.S. officials contend that, even with some signs of progress, Russia has not taken the necessary steps to ease tensions and could still face additional economic sanctions. Obama will look for Western allies to show a united front during a meeting of the Group of Seven major industrial nations that was quickly arranged after leaders decided to boycott a meeting Russia had been scheduled to host this week.

But at least some parts of Obama's visit will challenge the notion that the West has isolated Moscow. Russian President Vladmir Putin is scheduled to join U.S. and European leaders in France on Friday for a day of events marking the 70th anniversary of the D-Day invasion at Normandy. Putin will also hold one-on-one talks with French President Francois Hollande, his first meeting with a Western leader since the Ukraine crisis began.
"Putin may not get to host the G-8 but if he gets to go to Normandy with everybody, it begins to diminish the appearance of isolation," said Steven Pifer, the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine who now serves as a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.

The White House says Obama will not hold a formal bilateral meeting with Putin, though the two leaders are expected to have some contact. Officials also disputed the notion that Putin's presence constituted a return to normal relations, noting that Obama and other leaders have talked with the Russian president throughout the crisis with Ukraine.

Yet those reassurances may be of little solace to NATO allies who sit near the Russian border, particularly Poland, where Obama will open his trip Tuesday after departing the White House late Monday. In April, the U.S. moved about 150 troops into Poland to try to ease its security concerns, but Obama is likely to get requests from Polish leaders for additional support.

"He's going to hear a very strong message from Polish officials that the mission has not been accomplished," said Heather Conley, a Europe scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "In fact, the work has only begun."

While in Warsaw, Obama will also meet with regional leaders who are in town to mark the 25th anniversary of Poland's first post-communist free elections. Among those leaders will be Ukrainian President-elect Petro Poroshenko, who won Ukraine's May 25 election and will hold his first bilateral meeting with Obama.

"We very much admired that the people of Ukraine have turned out in huge numbers to elect President-elect Poroshenko," said Ben Rhodes, Obama's deputy national security adviser. "We've admired his commitment to pursue dialogue and to aim to reduce tensions and put Ukraine on a positive path."
From Warsaw, Obama will head to Brussels to meet with leaders from the other G-7 nations: U.S., Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Canada and Japan. The wealthy nations will discuss ways to wean Europe off of Russian energy supplies, as well as gauge interest in levying more sanctions on Russia.

The U.S. and European Union have each sanctioned Russian businesses and individuals, including some people in Putin's inner circle, and threatened the prospect of broader penalties on Russia's key economic sectors. But with European nations that have close economic ties with Russia already wary of those sector sanctions, Obama is likely to face an uphill climb in cementing those commitments amid the recent signs of progress with Ukraine.

"I think there is no political appetite for further sanctions," Conley said of the European nations.

Many of the G-7 leaders will also travel to Normandy for the anniversary of the Normandy invasion. But all eyes will be on Obama and Putin, who have a history of tense public encounters even before the Ukraine crisis worsened their relationship.

Obama and Putin will both attend a leaders' lunch and a ceremony at Sword Beach, one of the five main landing areas during the Normandy invasion. The U.S. president will also attend a separate ceremony at Omaha Beach, the largest of the assault areas during the June 6, 1944, invasion.

The president's trip comes during an intense stretch for his foreign policy agenda. He made a surprise visit to Afghanistan last week, followed by an announcement that he would be bringing the U.S. military commitment in Afghanistan to a close by the end of 2016. Obama also delivered a major foreign policy speech last week that aimed to push back at critics who say he has been too cautious, including in his dealings with Russia.

And on Saturday, the White House announced that the U.S. had freed Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, the lone U.S. prisoner of the Afghan war, after nearly five years in custody.
Youth urged to 'take up today's freedom challenges'
Young South Africans at the launch of Youth Month, Hector Pieterson Museum, Soweto, 2 June 2014

3 June 2014

While the youth of 1976 fought against apartheid, young South Africans of today should take up the fight against apathy, unemployment and HIV/Aids, Arts and Culture Minister Nathi Mthethwa said at the launch of Youth Month at the Hector Pieterson Museum in Soweto on Monday.

Youth Day 2014 will mark 38 years since the 16 June 1976 Soweto uprising, when the apartheid government killed hundreds of school children who were protesting against the imposition of Afrikaans as the medium of instruction in their schools.

With the advent of democracy 20 years ago, 16 June was proclaimed Youth Day in order to perpetuate the history and memory of the young South Africans who died for their country's freedom.

It also has since become a platform for encouraging South Africans to make their own sacrifices and play their part in growing their communities and the country as a whole.

This year, the main Youth Day event will take place at Galeshewe stadium in Kimberly in the Northern Cape.

Mthethwa said the aim of Youth Month was to educate young South Africans about their history and heritage and the role played by young people in the country's liberation struggle.

"During this month, we also encourage debates, discussions and conversations about the challenges that confront the youth of today and how they can take forward the baton of leadership. We will also use it to highlight government programmes and opportunities for youth development and how youth can access them.

The minister said the government also encouraged oral reminiscences by 1976 veterans "as part of sharing the experiences of 1976 and identifying and celebrating untold stories and unsung heroes and heroines in every community and every workplace while mobilising society in the implementation of Vision 2030".

Deputy Minister in the Presidency Buti Manamela said: "Collectively as young people we have to fight the scourge of HIV/Aids. We have to confront the challenge of unemployment, poverty and inequality.

"We have to be at the centre of changing our own lives. There is not going to be anyone, anywhere in the world who would do anything for us if we are not in the forefront of making a contribution to changing our own lives," Manamela said.

"From the lessons of Hector Pieterson, Tsietsi Mashinini and many others who died 38 years ago, they did not sit back, wait, they didn't say that someone will free us, they were in the forefront of defeating the apartheid regime.

"We are responsible for changing our own lives today as the current generation."
Institute of Technology students boycott exams
Yuda Poryo, an official with the Dar es Salaam Institute of Technology’s students organisation, addresses his fellow students as they staged a strike in the city yesterday.

Students of the Dar es Salaam Institute of Technology (DIT) and the school’s administration are locked in a tug of war over school fees payments.

The entire students’ body boycotted the exams which they were to sit for yesterday in an attempt to pressurize the school’s administration to allow their class mates who haven’t paid their tuition fees to go ahead and sit for their exams.

The student’s government prime minister, Lumora Steven said they want their fellow students be allowed to sit for the exams because according to him it is unfair to bar them despite their failure to complete payment of their school fees.

He said that at least 684 students are yet to pay their fees and that the school administration has announced plans to bar them from sitting for their examination.

“This is unfair, we are not going to sit for the exams until we are assured that all of us shall sit for the exams,” he said.

DIT Public Relations Officer, Amani Kakana said they previously would allow students to sit for their exams even when they had not completed payment of their fees but this time around the school administration has decided to take the bold decision and bar them.

“We have been too nice to them, we have been allowing them to do their exams regardless of delays in paying the fees and they are taking advantage,” he noted.
He insisted that the school administration will not allow any student who hasn’t paid their fees to sit for the exams.

“We want to discipline them…they should know that fees must be paid before exams,” said the PRO of the 3800 students strong Dar es Salaam Institute of Technology.
Defense ties reviewed with Tanzania
DAR ES SALAAM — Dr Hussein Ali Mwinyi, Minister of Defence of the United Republic of Tanzania, yesterday received Lt Gen Ahmed bin Harith al Nabhani, Chief of Staff of the Sultan’s Armed Forces (SAF), within the framework of his current visit to Tanzania.

The meeting discussed aspects of the existing joint military cooperation between the two friendly countries and issues of common concern.
Lt Gen Al Nabhani conveyed the greetings of the Minister Responsible for Defence Affairs to the Tanzanian Defence Minister. On his turn, the Tanzanian Defence Minister asked the SAF Chief of Staff to convey his greetings and best wishes to the Minister Responsible for Defence Affairs.
The meeting was attended by the delegation accompanying the SAF Chief of Staff, the Tanzanian Chief of Defence Forces and officials at the Tanzanian Ministry of Defence.
General Davis Mwamunyange, Chief of Defence Forces of Tanzania met the SAF Chief of Staff. The two sides held an official session of talks during which aspects of the existing joint military cooperation between the two friendly countries and matters of common concern were discussed.
The talks was attended by the delegation accompanying the SAF Chief of Staff and senior Tanzanian officers. — ONA

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Malawi's Peter Mutharika offers Joyce Banda olive branch
Malawi's newly elected President Peter Mutharika has said he is offering an "olive branch" to ex-leader Joyce Banda after winning disputed elections.
Get more news....
He was addressing thousands of supporters at a ceremony to celebrate his inauguration as president.

Mr Mutharika was charged with treason in March 2013 after being accused of plotting a coup. He denied the charge.

Mrs Banda failed in a bid to annul Mr Mutharika's victory in last month's election.

She called for a re-election, saying the election had been marred by widespread fraud.
'Bury the past'

However, Mrs Banda accepted defeat after the High Court ordered the release of the results on Friday.
Peter Mutharika is the brother of a former president
Mr Mutharika's supporters were adamant that he won in a fair contest
Mrs Banda tried to annul the result but has now accepted defeat
She is the first serving Malawian president to lose an election.

Mr Mutharika is Malawi's former foreign minister and brother of Bingu wa Mutharika, the late president who unexpectedly died in office in 2012.

Official results showed Mrs Banda came third with 20% of the vote.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

I think things like Cashgate happen when our leaders fail to differentiate between right and wrong”

Peter Mutharika Malawi's president

Mr Mutharika won with 36% of the vote, while former preacher Lazarus Chakwera was in second place with 28%.

The BBC's Raphael Tenthani reports from the ceremony that the 30,000-capacity Kamuzu Stadium in the main city, Blantyre, was packed with supporters of Mr Mutharika.

However, Mrs Banda did not attend and Mr Mutharika told the crowd he regretted that she had "declined to come here and hand over power to me".

"I look forward to shaking hands with her to bury the past. I come to her with an olive branch. Don't let it drop," he said.

A spokesman for Mrs Banda said she had not been officially invited, and her presidential convoy was withdrawn in the early hours of Saturday as soon as Mr Mutharika's victory was announced, AFP news agency reports.
Who is Peter Mutharika?

Born in 1940
Studied law at the US's Yale University and University of London
Former law professor at Washington University
Elected MP in 2009
Brother of late President Bingu wa Mutharika
Justice, education and foreign minister in brother's cabinet
Accused of plotting coup in 2012; denies treason charge
It would have been difficult for the outgoing president to travel to Blantyre," the spokesman is quoted as saying.

Mr Mutharika promised to prosecute all those involved in "Cashgate", a reference to a huge corruption scandal which hit Malawi during Mrs Banda's presidency.

"Cashgate was a very very serious problem. I think our country had lost its moral compass. I think things like Cashgate happen when our leaders fail to differentiate between right and wrong," Mr Mutharika said.

The scandal saw millions of dollars worth of public money allegedly stolen by politicians, civil servants and businessmen.

It led to donors cutting aid. Malawi is heavily dependent on aid, which provides 40% of the government's budget.

Correspondents say Mr Mutharika's treason trial is unlikely to go ahead as he now enjoys presidential immunity.

An official inquiry found he had asked the military to take over after his brother's death in 2012.

The military refused, opening the way for Mrs Banda, then the deputy leader, to assume the presidency, the inquiry found.