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    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)711-729-2687 [email protected]

    United States Africa CommandPublic Affairs Office25 January 2012

    Please find attached news clips for January 25, 2012, along with upcoming events ofinterest and UN News Service briefs.

    Of interest in todays clips:- Raid in Somalia frees two hostages- Ongoing challenges in Nigeria- GEN Ham in Rwanda- Libya is still unstable as loyalists to Qadhafi begin fighting in Bani Walid

    - Boko Haram has reported killed nearly 1,000 since 2009- Conflict continues in Somalia- Nigerians arrest 158 suspected Boko Haram

    This message is best viewed in HTML format.

    U.S. Africa Command Public AffairsPlease send questions or comments to:[email protected] (+49-711-729-2687)

    --------------------------------------------

    Top News related to U.S. Africa Command and Africa

    American hostage in Somalia rescued by US Navy SEALs in overnight raid

    (MSNBC)

    http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/25/10229917-american-hostage-in-somalia-rescued-by-us-navy-seals-in-overnight-raidJanuary 25, 2012By Jim Miklaszewski, NBC News chief Pentagon correspondentWASHINGTON -- In a daring nighttime raid Tuesday, U.S. Navy SEALs rescued twohostages, including one American, who were being held by kidnappers in Somalia, U.S.officials tell NBC News.

    US Army Prepares For Nigerias Possible BREAK-UP (Tumfweko )

    http://tumfweko.com/2012/01/23/us-army-prepares-for-nigerias-possible-break-up/January 24, 2012

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    By an unattributed authorThere are strong indications that the United States of America, USA, may be gearing upfor a possible balkanisation of the country following developments in the last few years.

    AFRICOM Commander In Rwanda (IGIHE)

    http://en.igihe.com/spip.php?article1623January 23, 2012By Joram MuhooziThe president of the Republic of Rwanda Paul Kagame has received General Carter F.

    Ham, AFRICOM Commander in his office at Village Urugwiro.

    Overnight explosions heard in Nigeria's Kano (Al Jazeera)

    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2012/01/201212402548882842.htmlJanuary 24, 2012By an unattributed authorExplosions and gunfire were reported early on Tuesday from an area near a police station

    in the northern Nigerian city of Kano, where co-ordinated attacks and gun battles lastweek killed about 178 people.

    Former Gaddafi stronghold revolts against Tripoli (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N04T20120124January 24, 2012By Oliver HolmesBANI WALID, Libya (Reuters) - Libya's ramshackle government lost control of a formerstronghold of Muammar Gaddafi on Tuesday after local people staged an armed uprising,posing the gravest challenge yet to the country's new rulers.

    Fighting erupts in Libya's Bani Walid (Al Jazeera)

    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2012/01/2012123182559826642.htmlJanuary 24, 2012By an unattributed authorAt least five people have been killed in fighting in the Libyan town of Bani Walidbetween fighters still loyal to Muammar Gaddafi and forces supporting the country'stransitional government.

    South Africa investigates 'gay slur' King Zwelithini (BBC News)

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16697943January 24, 2012By an unattributed authorSouth Africa's Human Rights Commission is investigating reports that Zulu King

    Goodwill Zwelithini called gay people "rotten" during a speech.

    Somalia's al-Shabab attack Ethiopian base in Beledweyne (BBC)

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16697879January 24, 2012By an unattributed author

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    Islamist militants have launched a suicide truck bomb attack on an Ethiopian militarybase in central Somalia, witnesses say.

    Nigeria's Boko Haram killed 935 people since 2009: report (Reuters) http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N00K20120124

    January 24, 2012By an unattributed authorABUJA (Reuters) - The Nigerian Islamist sect Boko Haram has killed at least 935 peoplesince it launched an uprising in 2009, including more than 250 in the first weeks of thisyear, Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday.

    Somalia suicide bomber attacks govt office near border (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N01T20120124January 24, 2012By Abdi Sheikh and Feisal OmarMOGADISHU (Reuters) - An al Shabaab fighter rammed a minibus loaded with

    explosives into a government building in central Somalia used by troops and politicianson Tuesday, a military official and an al Shabaab spokesman said.

    Zambia dissolves board of Libya-owned Zamtel (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/investingNews/idAFJOE80N03S20120124January 24, 2012By an unattributed authorLUSAKA (Reuters) - Zambia has dissolved the board of Libya-controlled Zamtel andappointed a new acting CEO, the government said on Tuesday, as it seizes 75 percent inthe fixed-line operator from owner LAP Green Networks.

    Aircraft bomb South Sudan refugee camp: UN (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N06W20120124January 24, 2012By an unattributed authorGENEVA (Reuters) - Aircraft bombed a South Sudan camp containing 5,000 refugeesnear the border with Sudan on Monday, injuring one boy and leaving 14 missing, theUnited Nations refugee agency said.

    Somalia suicide bomber attacks govt office near border (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N01T20120124January 24, 2012By Abdi Sheikh and Feisal OmarMOGADISHU (Reuters) - An al Shabaab fighter rammed a minibus loaded withexplosives into a government building in central Somalia used by troops and politicianson Tuesday, a military official and an al Shabaab spokesman said.

    South African mediator says rival Madagascar leaders irresponsible (Washington

    Post / Associated Press)

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    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/africa/south-african-mediator-says-rival-madagascar-leaders-irresponsible/2012/01/24/gIQAwFZKNQ_story.htmlJanuary 24, 2012By an unattributed authorPRETORIA, South Africa Regional heavyweight South Africa says efforts to mediate

    a solution to Madagascars political crisis have been frustrated by the irresponsiblebehavior of the Indian Ocean island nations rival leaders.

    West African states to work together against terror (AFP)

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5h_beN-ThiiBqmjtszfcqS55U9xqw?docId=CNG.173c36ad7fcb2b6231ea476adcec64a0.6f1January 24, 2012By an unattributed authorNOUAKCHOTT Representatives from Sahel states and Nigeria vowed Tuesday tohelp each other fight terrorism from Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and Islamist sectBoko Haram, which are said to have ties.

    THE WORLD; International court indicts Kenyans; The charges stem from the

    postelection violence that racked the country in 2007 (LA Times)

    (Text available below)

    January 24, 2012By Robyn DixonThe International Criminal Court ordered four powerful politicians in Kenya to stand trialfor crimes against humanity, a rare legal challenge to an elite that has long enjoyedimpunity in the East African nation.

    Darfur: Security Council condemns attack on UN-African Union peacekeepers

    (M2 Presswire)

    (Text available below)January 24, 2012By an unattributed authorThe Security Council today strongly condemned this weekend's attack on a UnitedNations-African Union patrol in Darfur, which resulted in one death, and called on theSudanese Government to bring the perpetrators to justice.

    Nigerians arrest Islamist militant suspects, sources say (CNN)

    http://edition.cnn.com/2012/01/24/world/africa/nigeria-attacks/index.html?hpt=hp_t2January 24, 2012By Nima Elbagir,Lagos, Nigeria (CNN) -- A joint military task force in Nigeria arrested 158 suspectedmembers of the Islamist militant group Boko Haram, security sources told CNN Tuesday,three days after a spate of bombings and shootings left more than 200 people dead inNigeria's second-largest city.

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    U.S. Africa Command Public Affairs Office +49(0)711-729-2687 [email protected]

    UN News Service Africa Briefs

    http://www.un.org/apps/news/region.asp?Region=AFRICA

    (Full Articles on UN Website)

    UN expert calls for urgent international food assistance to Sahel region

    24 January An independent United Nations human rights expert today urged the globalcommunity to take quick action to prevent millions of people in Africas Sahel regionfrom slipping into a full-scale food emergency, warning that drought, poor harvests andrising food prices have left the region on the brink of a humanitarian crisis.

    Cte dIvoire: Relief support key to reconstruction and development UN official

    24 January A senior United Nations relief official stressed today that assisting thepeople of Cte dIvoire in overcoming their current humanitarian difficulties will lay thefoundation for the countrys transition to reconstruction and development after last years

    bloody post-election violence.

    ICC prosecutor hails ruling on Kenya as crucial step for countrys future

    24 January The recent ruling by the International Criminal Court (ICC) requiring fourprominent Kenyans to stand trial for crimes against humanity allegedly committed in late2007 represents a significant step towards a peaceful future in the country, the Courtsprosecutor said today.

    Somalia: UN envoy re-establishes office in Mogadishu after 17-year hiatus

    24 January The United Nations envoy for Somalia, Augustine P. Mahiga, todayformally moved his office back to the countrys capital, Mogadishu, from neighbouringKenya, where it has been based for 17 years.

    UN agency condemns air raids on refugee site in South Sudan

    24 January The United Nations refugee agency today condemned two air raids near arefugee transit centre in South Sudan, saying that 14 people went missing during theattacks and that a teenage boy was injured.

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    Upcoming Events of Interest:

    25 JANUARY 2012

    WHEN: 9:30 - 11:30 a.m.WHAT: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP) Discussion on "AwakeningArab Innovation." Speakers: Marwan Muasher, Inger Andersen, and Rami Khouri.WHERE: CEIP, 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, NWCONTACT: 202-483-7600 ; web site: www.carnegieendowment.orgSOURCE: CEIP - event announcement at:

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    http://www.carnegieendowment.org/2012/01/25/awakening-arab-innovation/92mp

    WHEN: 12:00 - 1:30 p.m.WHAT: Center for American Progress (CAP) Discussion on "President Obama and a21st Century Military."

    Speakers: Featured panelists: Michael Breen, Vice President, Truman National SecurityProject; Jim Arkedis, Director, National Security Project, Progressive Policy Institute;and Dr. Lawrence J. Korb, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress; Moderator:Rudy deLeon, Senior Vice President of National Security and International Policy,Center for American Progress.WHERE: CAP, 1333 H Street, NWCONTACT: 202-682-161; web site: www.americanprogress.orgSOURCE: CAP - event announcement at:http://www.americanprogress.org/events/2012/01/defensestrategy.html

    WHEN: 4:00 -7:30 p.m.

    WHAT: U.S. Institute of Peace, Next Generation Peacebuilding and Social Change inthe Arab World. Featured the U.S. premiere of "Salam Shabab" (Peace Youth), the firstpeacebuilding reality TV series for Iraqi youthWHERE: USIS, 2301 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DCCONTACT: Alexis Toriello at [email protected]: http://www.usip.org/salam-shabab-premiere

    26 JANUARY 2012

    WHEN: 2:00 - 3:30 p.m.WHAT: Brookings Institution Discussion on "Negotiating Humanitarian Access: HowFar to Compromise to Deliver Aid."Speakers: Introduction and Moderator Elizabeth Ferris, Co-Director, Brookings-LSEProject on Internal Displacement; Panelists: William Garvelink, Senior Adviser, U.S.Leadership in Development, Center for Strategic International Studies; Markus Geisser,Deputy Head of Regional Delegation, International Committee for the Red Cross;Michael Neuman, Research Director, Centre de Rflexion sur lAction et les SaviorHumanitaries , Mdecins Sans Frontires; and Rabih Torbay, Vice President forInternational Operations, International Medical Corps.WHERE: Brookings Institution, 1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NWCONTACT: 202-797-6105; [email protected]; web site: www.brookings.eduSOURCE: Brookings Institution - event announcement at:http://www.brookings.edu/events/2012/0126_negotiating_access.aspx

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    FULLTEXT

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    American hostage in Somalia rescued by US Navy SEALs in overnight raid

    (MSNBC)

    http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/25/10229917-american-hostage-in-somalia-rescued-by-us-navy-seals-in-overnight-raidJanuary 25, 2012

    By Jim Miklaszewski, NBC News chief Pentagon correspondent

    WASHINGTON -- In a daring nighttime raid Tuesday, U.S. Navy SEALs rescued twohostages, including one American, who were being held by kidnappers in Somalia, U.S.officials tell NBC News.

    American Jessica Buchanan, 32, and a 60-year-old Dane, Poul Thisted, were working fora Danish relief organization in northern Somalia when they were kidnapped last October.U.S. officials described their kidnappers as heavily armed common criminals with noknown ties to any organized militant group.

    According to the U.S. officials, two teams of Navy SEALs landed by helicopter near thecompound where the two hostages were being held. As the SEALS approached thecompound on foot gunfire broke out, the U.S. officials said, and several of the militantswere reportedly killed. There is no word that any of the Americans were wounded.

    The SEALs gathered up Buchanan and Thisted, loaded them onto the helicopters andflew them to safety at an undisclosed location. The two hostages were not injured duringthe rescue operation and are reported to be in relatively good condition.

    The two had been working for the Danish Refugee Council on a demining project innorthern Somalia. The humanitarian group has been providing relief to some 450,000refugees in the Somalia-Kenya border region.

    News reports at the time said the two were kidnapped Oct. 25 along with a Somalicolleague when their three-car convoy was stopped on the way to an airport. A self-proclaimed Somali pirate said they had been kidnapped for ransom by pirates stymied byWestern nations' efforts to stop the seizure of ships off the coast. The fate of the Somalicolleague was unclear.

    The first indication of the rescue operation came Tuesday night in Washington fromPresident Barack Obama himself.

    As the president entered the House chambers to give his State of the Union Speech, hepointed to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta standing in the crowd and said, "Leon. Goodjob tonight. Good job tonight." The president made no mention of the hostage rescue, butfinished his speech with a reference to the killing of Osama bin Laden last May in asimilar operation to the one conducted by Navy SEALs Tuesday night.

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    US Army Prepares For Nigerias Possible BREAK-UP (Tumfweko )

    http://tumfweko.com/2012/01/23/us-army-prepares-for-nigerias-possible-break-up/January 24, 2012By an unattributed author

    There are strong indications that the United States of America, USA, may be gearing upfor a possible balkanisation of the country following developments in the last few years.

    This indication is contained in a publication credited to NEWSRESCUE in America,where accounts of an article written by Director of the African Security Research Projectin Washington, DC and Guest Columnist of AllAfrica Global Media, Mr. Daniel Volmanand speakers in an AFRICOM conference held at Fort McNair were given.

    It would be recalled that in 2005, the US predicted that Nigeria would cease to be anation state in 2015 in view of threats posed by continued ethno-religious crisis over the

    years. Similarly, the United States military had, in May 2008, conducted a war games testcalled Unified Quest 2008, to ascertain how its military might respond to a war in parts ofAfrica with a mention of Nigeria.

    Also, the question of how to handle possible splits between factions within the Nigeriangovernment was tested with a plan by the Americans to send about 20,000 troops tosecure and take over the oil-rich South while the North would be turned into an Arabaligned, possibly terrorist enclave.

    Recent developments in the polity, namely the post-election violence up country, theactivities of militants in the South and the recent activities of the Islamic Boko Haramsect in a spate of terrorism-like bomb attacks may have laid strong credence to the claim.

    Indications are that the US will favour a disintegration of the country given Nigerias nottoo distant past romance with countries considered not to be allies of the self-acclaimedworld super power.

    The Nigerian government had not long ago signed deals with Russia and Iran for majorresource, military and power (Nuclear generation) mutual ventures. This alliance did notgo down well with the US as these nations are considered perpetual enemies. In addition,Nigeria has been promoting development, not by serving US interest but by cooperationswith so-called third world Nations like Brazil.

    The US has been known to be at the center of important breakups in the past. Countrieslike Vietnam and Korea had the US play a major skewed role, and when these Nationsdivided into North and South, the US stationed its troops at the border to defend usuallythe Southern territory, and the Northern usually became a rejected, isolated rudiment.

    It would also be recalled that in the 2010 budget, the US had made provision for theexpansion of the operations of United States Africa Command (AFRICOM), which will

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    provide increased security assistance to repressive regimes in Nigeria, Niger, Chad, andthe Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and key US allies such as Ethiopia, Kenya,Djibouti, Rwanda and Uganda.

    This is even as in 2009, Nigerias late President, Umaru Musa YarAdua, clearly rejected

    the installation of US AFRICOM military command in Nigeria, probably sensing that thePentagon had planned to establish a new military command in Africa.Newsrescue

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    AFRICOM Commander In Rwanda (IGIHE)

    http://en.igihe.com/spip.php?article1623January 23, 2012By Joram Muhoozi

    The president of the Republic of Rwanda Paul Kagame has received General Carter F.Ham, AFRICOM Commander in his office at Village Urugwiro.

    This is in connection with AFRICOM the U.S established state partnership program withRwanda that was established in 2009 and aimed at providing support to the RwandaDefense Forces (RDF).

    General Hams visit is aimed at holding discussions with Rwanda military officials onhow to further strengthen the existing partnership.

    General Ham said during the visit that the U.S troops have good relationship withRwanda troops because they provide through trainings for capacity building focusing onsustainable security.

    Ham is a United States Army general, who serves as the second and current Commander,U.S. Africa Command. In that position, he has been in command of the initial 2011military intervention in Libya.

    He served as an enlisted Infantryman in the 82nd Airborne Division before attendingJohn Carroll University in Cleveland, Ohio. He was commissioned as 2nd Lieutenantthrough the Army Reserve Officers Training Corps (Army ROTC) in the Infantry as aDistinguished Military Graduate in 1976.

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    Overnight explosions heard in Nigeria's Kano (Al Jazeera)

    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2012/01/201212402548882842.htmlJanuary 24, 2012By an unattributed author

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    Explosions and gunfire were reported early on Tuesday from an area near a police stationin the northern Nigerian city of Kano, where co-ordinated attacks and gun battles lastweek killed about 178 people.

    The AFP news agency reported early on Tuesday that its correspondent heard a series of

    blasts and gunshots coming from an area where a mobile police headquarters is located.Details were not immediately clear and police were not available for comment.

    A resident reported a similar account.

    "I was awoken from sleep by explosions and gunshots coming from the mobile barracksand police station opposite," the resident said, adding that they had stopped after severalminutes.

    "It's terrifying ... It's too dangerous to go out, besides there is curfew."

    Sporadic gunfire could still be heard after the explosions halted.

    A nighttime curfew is in effect in the wake of Friday's bomb attacks and fierce gunbattles between Boko Haram fighters and police in Kano, Nigeria's second largest city.

    On Monday, Nigerian police said they had found several cars and vans filled withexplosives in the city.

    "The police were on a stop-and-search today and in two of the checkpoints, the BokoHaram members on sighting the checkpoints abandoned their vehicles and ran," a high-level police officer told the Reuters news agency, asking not to be named.

    "The vehicles were later checked and the cars were loaded with explosives. Two brandnew Hilux open pick-up vans were also found packed with explosives in the Bompai areaof Kano."

    Unexploded car bombs

    Authorities discovered at least 10 unexploded car bombs, including one near a policestation in Kano, as well as around 100 other explosive devices through the day onMonday.

    Al Jazeera's Yvonne Ndege, reporting from Kano, said the cars, which were discovered ata petrol station near the central police station, were "filled with explosive devices thatwere clearly designed to go off on Friday" but did not.

    In reaction to the discovery of the bombs, and potential for the discovery of moreexplosives, our correspondent said police had been asking for citizens to report anysuspicious activities or unattended vehicles parked near symbols of Nigerian authoritysuch as police stations and government buildings.

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    Magaji Musa Majiya, a police spokesperson, said officers were able to disarm the carbombs.

    According to police figures released on Monday, 29 policemen, three intelligence

    officers, two immigration officers and scores of civilians were among the dead in lastweek's attacks.

    "Nearly all Nigerian security agencies are involved [in trying to figure out] how BokoHaram were able to co-ordinate the attacks. They are trying to beef up authority aroundthe symbols of Nigerian authority" our correspondent said.

    In Maiduguri, a town in the northeast that has been at the centre of Boko Haram activity,a policeman was shot dead on Monday.

    "The policeman was on patrol along with his colleague in a vehicle when the Boko

    Haram opened fire and shot him dead," said Simeon Midena, the commissioner of police.

    "As usual the killers just disappeared into the crowd."

    Maidiguri patrols

    The joint military task force has increased its defences and widened its patrols inMaiduguri in recent days.

    On Sunday, the military killed four suspected Boko Haram gunmen in Maiduguri andfound explosives in their car, a military spokesman said.

    Boko Haram, which was formed in Maiduguri in 2002, has killed hundreds of people inthe last year, mostly in and around its home state of Borno, though its attacks have beenspreading across the north of Africa's most populous nation.

    The group, loosely modelled on Afghanistan's Taliban, focuses its attacks mostly on thepolice, military and government, but has also targeted Christians more recently.

    It says it is fighting enemies who have wronged its members through violence, arrests oreconomic neglect and corruption.

    Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan has been severely criticised for not getting a gripon a group that he says has infiltrated the police, military and all areas of government.

    Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

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    Former Gaddafi stronghold revolts against Tripoli (Reuters)

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    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N04T20120124January 24, 2012By Oliver Holmes

    BANI WALID, Libya (Reuters) - Libya's ramshackle government lost control of a former

    stronghold of Muammar Gaddafi on Tuesday after local people staged an armed uprising,posing the gravest challenge yet to the country's new rulers.

    Elders in Bani Walid, where militias loyal to the ruling National Transitional Council(NTC) were driven out in a gunbattle a day earlier, said they were appointing their ownlocal government and rejected any interference from the authorities in the capital Tripoli.

    The town's revolt will heighten doubts in the West about the NTC government's ability toinstil law and order crucial to rebuilding oil exports, to disarm tribal militias and guardLibyan borders in a region where al Qaeda is active.

    Local elders denied reports that they were loyal to Gaddafi, who was captured and killedin October after weeks on the run, and Reuters reporters in Bani Walid saw no signs ofthe Gaddafi-era green flags which witnesses earlier said had been hoisted over the town.

    But the collapse of NTC authority in the town, one of the most die-hard bastions of pro-Gaddafi sentiment during Libya's nine-month civil war last year, will compound theproblems besetting a government that in the past week has been staggering from onecrisis to another.

    The uprising in Bani Walid could not come at a worse time for the National TransitionalCouncil government. In the past week its chief has had his office overrun by protestersangry at the slow pace of reform and the second most senior official has quit, citing whathe described as an "atmosphere of hatred."

    Reuters reporters who entered Bani Walid on Tuesday morning saw a few of the black,green and red flags of last year's anti-Gaddafi rebellion but there was no sign of anycentral government presence.

    About 200 elders who gathered in a mosque decided to abolish an NTC-appointedmilitary council for the town and appoint their own local council, in direct defiance of theauthority of the government in Tripoli.

    "If (NTC chief Mustafa) Abdel Jalil is going to force anyone on us, we won't accept thatby any means," one of the elders, Ali Zargoun, told Reuters at the mosque.

    "BROTHERS IN REVOLUTION"

    Accounts from Bani Walid, a town about 200 km (120 miles) from Tripoli, late onMonday described armed Gaddafi supporters attacking the barracks of the pro-government militia in the town and then forcing them to retreat.

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    A fighter with the routed pro-government militia told Reuters the loyalists were flying"brand new green flags" from the centre of town. The flags were symbols of Gaddafi'smaverick, 42-year dictatorship.

    But elders on Tuesday disputed that account.

    "In the Libyan revolution, we have all become brothers. We will not be an obstacle toprogress," said another elder, Miftah Jubarra. "Regarding allegations of pro-Gaddafielements in Bani Walid, this is not true. This is the media. You will go around the cityand find no green flags or pictures of Gaddafi."

    Bani Walid, base of the powerful Warfallah tribe, was one of the last towns to surrenderto the anti-Gaddafi rebellion last year.

    A Libyan air official said war planes were being mobilised to fly to Bani Walid. But it

    was not immediately clear what the government in Tripoli could do. It has yet todemonstrate that it has an effective fighting force under its command and Bani Walid,protected behind a deep valley, is difficult to attack.

    EMBATTLED GOVERNMENT

    During Libya's nine-month war, anti-Gaddafi NTC rebels tried to take Bani Walid but didnot progress much beyond the outskirts of the town. It later emerged that Saif al-Islam,one of Muammar Gaddafi's sons who was captured in the Sahara desert in November,had been using Bani Walid as a base.

    Soon before the end of the conflict, with Gaddafi's defeat unavoidable, local tribal eldersnegotiated an agreement under which forces loyal to the NTC were able to enter the townwithout a fight.

    Relations have been uneasy since then and there have been occasional flare-ups ofviolence.

    A local resident, who did not want to be identified, said Monday's violence began whenmembers of the May 28 militia, affiliated to the NTC, arrested some former Gaddafiloyalists. That prompted other supporters of the former leader to attack the militia'sgarrison. "They massacred men at the doors of the militia headquarters," said the resident.

    FRAGILE GRIP ON POWER

    The NTC still has the backing of the NATO powers who, with their diplomatic pressureand bombing campaign, helped push out Gaddafi and install the new government.

    NTC authorities pledged to unify the tribally-divided country, reconstruct its once mightyoil industry that made Libya a major exporter in OPEC, and hold democratic elections.

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    But questions are now being raised inside some Western governments about the NTC'sability to govern Libya effectively and secure its frontiers against al Qaeda, armstraffickers and illegal migrants trying to get into Europe.

    The NTC tumbled into its worst crisis since the end of the civil war at the weekend whena crowd of protesters in the eastern city of Benghazi stormed the council's localheadquarters when NTC chief Mustafa Abdel Jalil was inside.

    The protesters, who supported the revolt against Gaddafi, were angry that more progresshad not been made to restore basic public services. They also said many of the NTC'smembers were tarnished by having served in Gaddafi's administration.

    Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, deputy head of the NTC and target of some of the protests, said hewas resigning. Abdel Jalil warned that the protests could drag the country into a"bottomless pit."

    ###

    Fighting erupts in Libya's Bani Walid (Al Jazeera)

    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2012/01/2012123182559826642.htmlJanuary 24, 2012By an unattributed author

    At least five people have been killed in fighting in the Libyan town of Bani Walidbetween fighters still loyal to Muammar Gaddafi and forces supporting the country'stransitional government.

    Mohamed Bashir, the town's mayor, told Al Jazeera late on Monday that forces loyal tothe National Transitional Council had pulled out of the town at 7pm local time after aboutfour hours of fighting, while a town spokesman said the Gaddafi-era Libyan green flaghad been raised over the town.

    "We don't see fighting right now, but there are a lot of casualties," said Bashir."Tomorrow morning, the situation will probably be much better... A military force [will]take over Bani Walid, to take back security," he said.

    A resident of the town, about 200km southeast of Tripoli, said the fight on Monday usedheavy weaponry, including 106-mm anti-tank guns, and that 20 people were wounded.

    The assault was the first major offensive launched by Gaddafi loyalists since he waskilled in October, weeks after being toppled from power.

    "There are around 100 and 150 men armed with heavy weapons who are attacking. Wehave asked for the army to intervene, but the defence ministry and NTC have let usdown," Mahmud Warfelli, a spokesperson for the Bani Walid local council, said.

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    "[The gunmen] took control and hoisted the green flag on some important districts in thecentre of the city," he said, referring to the Gaddafi-era flag. "We've been warning aboutthis for the past two months."

    Last stronghold

    Bani Walid, considered a bastion of the powerful Warfallah tribe, was one of the lasttowns in Libya to surrender to the uprising that toppled Gaddafi last year. Many people inthe area still oppose the country's new leadership.

    The violence in Bani Walid first broke out when members of the May 28 group arrestedsome Gaddafi loyalists.

    That prompted other supporters of the former leader to attack the group's garrison in thetown, according to the resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

    "They massacred men at the doors of the militia headquarters," the resident said.

    Fathi Baja, a senior NTC member, said that ambulances had been unable to evacuatethose wounded because there were "snipers positioned on a school and a mosque in thevicinity" of the attack.

    Fotmani said later that Gaddafi loyalists had taken all the heavy weaponry from the NTCgarrison, and set fire to the local council's main building.

    "Yesterday they had distributed leaflets saying 'We will be back soon. We will take therats out'," he said.

    NTC struggling

    Libya's NTC has already been struggling with violent protests in its stronghold city ofBenghazi and the resignation of its second most senior official.

    An air force official told Reuters that jets were being mobilised to fly to Bani Walid. InTripoli, there were signs of security being tightened, Reuters reporters in the city said.

    During Libya's nine-month civil war, fighters opposed to Gaddafi fought for months totake Bani Walid.

    Local tribal elders eventually agreed to let NTC fighters enter the town, but relationshave been uneasy since and there have been occasional flare-ups of violence.

    In November last year, several people were killed in Bani Walid when an armed groupfrom Tripoli's Souq al-Juma district arrived in the town to try to arrest some local men.

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    Re-taking control of the town is a challenge due to natural defences. Anyone approachingfrom the north has to descend into a deep valley and then climb up the other side, givingdefenders an advantage.

    It was this landscape, in part, that prevented opposition fighters from taking the town

    during the civil war, despite the fact they were heavily armed.

    Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

    ###

    South Africa investigates 'gay slur' King Zwelithini (BBC News)

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16697943January 24, 2012By an unattributed author

    South Africa's Human Rights Commission is investigating reports that Zulu KingGoodwill Zwelithini called gay people "rotten" during a speech.

    The rights group says it has obtained transcripts of the speech to look into the matter.

    The royal household has denied that the king made any homophobic comments - and hasblamed "reckless translation".

    South Africa's Times newspaper, which first carried the story, told the BBC it stands byits translation.

    South Africa's constitution specifically forbids discrimination on the grounds of sexualorientation - but homophobia is widespread and gay people complain they are oftenattacked.

    The BBC's Pumza Fihlani in Johannesburg says that as the leader of South Africa'slargest ethnic group, King Zwelithini is the most influential of the country's manytraditional rulers.

    HRC spokesperson Vincent Moaga says the traditional king is respected by millions ofSouth Africans - and they need "an accurate reflection of what he said".

    The HRC says it will be writing to the king and will demand an immediate retraction ifhe admits to making homophobic remarks.

    "If it is indeed accurate that His Majesty, the Zulu king, made the utterances as reported,they constitute hate speech... and are inflammatory," Mr Moaga said.

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    King Goodwill Zwelithini allegedly made the anti-gay remarks in rural eastern SouthAfrica during a ceremony at the weekend to mark the Battle of Isandlwana - a famous19th Century Zulu victory over British troops.

    "Traditionally, there were no people who engaged in same-sex relationships," The Times

    quoted the king as saying.

    "There was nothing like that and if you do it, you must know that you are rotten," KingGoodwill said, according to the newspaper, adding: "I don't care how you feel about it ...same sex is not acceptable."

    But the king's office says the newspaper reports were badly translated and the king'smeaning misconstrued.

    "At no stage did His Majesty condemn gay relations or same relations," spokespersonPrince Mbonisi Zulu told the Sapa news agency.

    The king was referring to cases of male rape as a sign of moral decay, the spokesmansaid.

    President Jacob Zuma - the first Zulu leader of modern South Africa - was also at theweekend ceremony and used the occasion to call on South Africans to end discriminationagainst gay people.

    Last year's brutal murder of 24-year-old gay activist Noxolo Nogwaza highlighted SouthAfrica's growing homophobia, correspondents say.

    ###

    Somalia's al-Shabab attack Ethiopian base in Beledweyne (BBC)

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-16697879January 24, 2012By an unattributed author

    Islamist militants have launched a suicide truck bomb attack on an Ethiopian militarybase in central Somalia, witnesses say.

    Al-Shabab says it killed 10 Ethiopian soldiers in the attack in the town of Beledweynebut this has not been confirmed.

    Ethiopian forces seized Beledweyne from al-Shabab last month.

    Kenyan troops have also entered Somalia to battle the al-Qaeda linked group which stillcontrols many areas.

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    Beledweyne is a strategic town, 30km (20 miles) from the Ethiopian border on the mainroad to the capital, Mogadishu, and also on the major artery linking the north and south ofthe country.

    "There was a heavy explosion that shook the whole the city," local security official

    Mohamed Osman told the AFP news agency.

    "The suicide bomber was shot by security guards before reaching the gate and he blew upthe vehicle. We are still investigating," he said.

    Much of the government building, which Ethiopian troops had taken over, has collapsed,witnesses say.

    Ethiopia has said it wants to withdraw its forces from Somalia and the African Union hassaid its troops will replace them, however no date has been set.

    The AU is supporting government forces in Mogadishu. Al-Shabab pulled out of thecapital in August 2011 but has continued to stage suicide attacks on the city.

    In what BBC correspondents say is a sign of increasing confidence in the securitysituation in the city, the UN special representative has moved back from neighbouringKenya to Mogadishu - after an absence of 17 years.

    "I sincerely hope that the arrival of the UN Political Office will mark the start of renewedhope for the future of Somalia," Ambassador Augustine Mahiga said in a statementreleased after his arrival at the airport.

    "We have much to do and we are eager to get straight to work," he said, promising themove would "herald the beginning of a new era of co-operation and political engagementas the transitional period draws to a close".

    The presence of Ethiopian troops in Somalia was hugely controversial in 2006-9,however, analysts say there is less opposition this time, as al-Shabab have lost somesupport.

    The Islamist group has banned most international aid agencies from the areas it controlsin the midst of the region's worst drought for 60 years.

    Tens of thousands of people died, as some areas were declared famine zones.

    ###

    Nigeria's Boko Haram killed 935 people since 2009: report (Reuters) http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N00K20120124January 24, 2012By an unattributed author

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    ABUJA (Reuters) - The Nigerian Islamist sect Boko Haram has killed at least 935 peoplesince it launched an uprising in 2009, including more than 250 in the first weeks of thisyear, Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday.

    Boko Haram, which means "Western education is sinful" in the Hausa language spokenin northern Nigeria, is loosely modelled on Afghanistan's Taliban. It has claimedresponsibility for bombing churches, police stations, military facilities, banks and beerparlours in the mainly Muslim north of Nigeria.

    The sect focuses its attacks mostly on the police, military and government, but hasrecently increased its attacks on Christian institutions. It says it is fighting enemies whohave wronged its members through violence, arrests or economic neglect and corruption.

    Bomb attacks and gun battles in Nigeria's second largest city, Kano, killed 186 people onJanuary 20, in Boko Haram's most deadly attack to date. Gunfire was heard in Kano early

    on Tuesday, witnesses said.

    "Boko Haram's attacks show a complete and utter disregard for human life," said CorinneDufka, senior West Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch.

    "The Nigerian authorities need to call a halt to this campaign of terror and bring to justicethose responsible for planning and carrying out these reprehensible crimes."

    The report said 550 people were killed in 115 separate attacks by Boko Haram last year,mostly in the far northeastern state of Borno, where the sect was founded in 2002.

    Boko Haram has moved from drive-by shootings and petrol bombs to suicide attacksusing large and increasingly sophisticated explosives. A suicide car bomb last year killed25 people at the United Nations headquarters in the capital Abuja.

    In July 2009 the sect launched an uprising in the northeast in which more than 800 peoplewere killed in five days of fighting with security forces.

    The sect originally said it wanted sharia (Islamic law) to be applied more widely acrossNigeria.

    President Goodluck Jonathan has been severely criticised for not getting a grip on a grouphe says has infiltrated the police, military and all areas of government.

    "Jonathan's inability to respond effectively, or articulate a credible strategy, reinforces thegrowing perception of a deep leadership void in Abuja," London-based risk adviserEurasia Group said in a research note on Tuesday.

    "So far militarization of the region and strict curfews have only had limited effect andhuge (military) spending outlays in 2012 offer little hope for a credible broader strategy."

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    Somalia suicide bomber attacks govt office near border (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N01T20120124

    January 24, 2012By Abdi Sheikh and Feisal Omar

    MOGADISHU (Reuters) - An al Shabaab fighter rammed a minibus loaded withexplosives into a government building in central Somalia used by troops and politicianson Tuesday, a military official and an al Shabaab spokesman said.

    The attack occurred in Baladweyne, a town near the Ethiopian border which was capturedby Ethiopian troops about three weeks ago. Both Ethiopia and Kenya have sent troopsinto Somalia to fight al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab following a wave of cross-borderattacks and kidnappings that Nairobi blamed on the rebels.

    The militia, which left most of its bases in the capital Mogadishu last August, haslaunched guerrilla-style attacks despite losing ground in some key southern strongholdssince the incursion by Ethiopian and Kenyan troops.

    "A minibus carrying explosives entered Baladweyne administration headquarterscompound. Government soldiers tried to stop it by firing but all in vain," Hussein Aden, asenior military official, told Reuters by phone.

    Aden said there was no immediate report of casualties and the area surrounding thecompound had been sealed off.

    Aden Abdulle, head of a pro-government militia group fighting alongside Somali andEthiopian soldiers against al Shabaab, told Reuters the building attacked by the rebelshoused Transitional Federal Government lawmakers and Ethiopian and Somaligovernment soldiers.

    Abdulle said the number of casualties was unknown.

    Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack and said it had inflicted many casualties.

    "We carried the car bomb successfully into the Ethiopian and Somali base in Baladweynethis morning. Our brave driver is martyred. There we killed many Ethiopian and Somalitroops on a parade," al Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab told Reuters byphone.

    Ethiopian soldiers previously went into Somalia in 2006, and left in early 2009 afterpushing the Islamist organization, Islamic Courts Union, out of the capital Mogadishu.

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    Al Shabaab, which wants to impose a harsh interpretation of sharia, Islamic law, on theHorn of Africa nation, has waged a bloody five-year campaign to drive the largelyimpotent government from power.

    The Western-backed government is supported by an African Union military force.

    ###

    Zambia dissolves board of Libya-owned Zamtel (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/investingNews/idAFJOE80N03S20120124January 24, 2012By an unattributed author

    LUSAKA (Reuters) - Zambia has dissolved the board of Libya-controlled Zamtel andappointed a new acting CEO, the government said on Tuesday, as it seizes 75 percent inthe fixed-line operator from owner LAP Green Networks.

    The government also said in a statement it would restructure the ownership of Zamtel toensure Zambians own the bulk of the company.

    "The President has ordered the dissolution of the board of Directors of Zamtel," Lusaka'sState House said in the statement.

    An official for LAP Green Networks said the company was preparing a statement.

    Zambia's finance minister said on Monday the government planned to take back the 75percent stake, which was sold by the previous administration to the Libyan operator for$257 million.

    A government inquiry in November ruled the 2010 transaction illegal. Zambia last weekseized bank accounts belonging to Zamtel as part of a money-laundering investigation.The company has denied any wrongdoing.

    Since his election in September on promises to fight corruption, Zambian PresidentMichael Sata has chipped away at several deals made during the administration of hispredecessor Rupiah Banda.

    Sata in October reversed the $5.4 million sale of unlisted Finance Bank to South Africa'sFirstRand.

    ###

    Aircraft bomb South Sudan refugee camp: UN (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N06W20120124January 24, 2012By an unattributed author

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    GENEVA (Reuters) - Aircraft bombed a South Sudan camp containing 5,000 refugeesnear the border with Sudan on Monday, injuring one boy and leaving 14 missing, theUnited Nations refugee agency said.

    Several bombs were dropped on Elfoj, a transit site less than 10 km from the border inUpper Nile state, at 10 a.m. local time, U.N. spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said in astatement on Tuesday.

    Fleming did not say Sudan was behind the attacks but Khartoum and its southernneighbour, which seceded from the north last year, regularly trade accusations ofsupporting armed insurgencies on each other's territory.

    Their row escalated on Monday when South Sudan started to shut down oil production,accusing Sudan of stealing $815 million worth of crude that it piped to its northernneighbour for shipment.

    The United Nations said it moved 1,140 refugees away from he border. Another 4,000followed.

    ###

    Somalia suicide bomber attacks govt office near border (Reuters)

    http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE80N01T20120124January 24, 2012By Abdi Sheikh and Feisal Omar

    MOGADISHU (Reuters) - An al Shabaab fighter rammed a minibus loaded withexplosives into a government building in central Somalia used by troops and politicianson Tuesday, a military official and an al Shabaab spokesman said.

    The attack occurred in Baladweyne, a town near the Ethiopian border which was capturedby Ethiopian troops about three weeks ago. Both Ethiopia and Kenya have sent troopsinto Somalia to fight al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab following a wave of cross-borderattacks and kidnappings that Nairobi blamed on the rebels.

    The militia, which left most of its bases in the capital Mogadishu last August, haslaunched guerrilla-style attacks despite losing ground in some key southern strongholdssince the incursion by Ethiopian and Kenyan troops.

    "A minibus carrying explosives entered Baladweyne administration headquarterscompound. Government soldiers tried to stop it by firing but all in vain," Hussein Aden, asenior military official, told Reuters by phone.

    Aden said there was no immediate report of casualties and the area surrounding thecompound had been sealed off.

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    Aden Abdulle, head of a pro-government militia group fighting alongside Somali andEthiopian soldiers against al Shabaab, told Reuters the building attacked by the rebelshoused Transitional Federal Government lawmakers and Ethiopian and Somaligovernment soldiers.

    Abdulle said the number of casualties was unknown.

    Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack and said it had inflicted many casualties.

    "We carried the car bomb successfully into the Ethiopian and Somali base in Baladweynethis morning. Our brave driver is martyred. There we killed many Ethiopian and Somalitroops on a parade," al Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab told Reuters byphone.

    Ethiopian soldiers previously went into Somalia in 2006, and left in early 2009 after

    pushing the Islamist organization, Islamic Courts Union, out of the capital Mogadishu.

    Al Shabaab, which wants to impose a harsh interpretation of sharia, Islamic law, on theHorn of Africa nation, has waged a bloody five-year campaign to drive the largelyimpotent government from power.

    The Western-backed government is supported by an African Union military force.

    ###

    South African mediator says rival Madagascar leaders irresponsible (Washington

    Post / Associated Press)

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/africa/south-african-mediator-says-rival-madagascar-leaders-irresponsible/2012/01/24/gIQAwFZKNQ_story.htmlJanuary 24, 2012By an unattributed author

    PRETORIA, South Africa Regional heavyweight South Africa says efforts to mediatea solution to Madagascars political crisis have been frustrated by the irresponsiblebehavior of the Indian Ocean island nations rival leaders.

    South African deputy foreign minister Marius Fransman gave his blunt assessment beforeheading into a meeting Tuesday with factions from Madagascar, which has been inturmoil since President Marc Ravalomanana was toppled in 2009 in a coup led by AndryRajoelina.

    Fransman says a weekend attempt by Ravalomanana to fly home from his South Africanexile was premature, unfortunate and it was irresponsible.

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    Fransman also says Rajoelina, who blocked Ravalomananas journey mid-flightSaturday, was irresponsible for threatening to arrest Ravalomanana.

    ###

    West African states to work together against terror (AFP)http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5h_beN-ThiiBqmjtszfcqS55U9xqw?docId=CNG.173c36ad7fcb2b6231ea476adcec64a0.6f1January 24, 2012By an unattributed author

    NOUAKCHOTT Representatives from Sahel states and Nigeria vowed Tuesday tohelp each other fight terrorism from Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and Islamist sectBoko Haram, which are said to have ties.

    Ministers from Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Algeria are in Nouakchott for the second day

    of a security meeting to which Nigeria has been invited to examine links between the twoorganisations.

    "We invited Nigeria to exchange experiences and intelligence regarding the fight againstterrorism and extremism and to see how we can help each other face the challenge posedby AQIM in the Sahel and Boko Haram in Nigeria," said Mauritania's foreign ministerHamadi Ould Hamadi.

    He said the meeting aimed to "build a strategic vision to eradicate terrorism, transfrontiercrime and other challenges facing our region.

    Niger's Foreign Minister Mohamed Bazoum called for "regular contact to face a rapidlyevolving situation which provides us with greater challenges.

    "We will take stock of developments and the deteriorating situation due to theproliferation of Libyan weapons including the return of armed fighters and the rise of thesect Boko Haram."

    Mali's Foreign Minister Soumeylou Boubeye Maiga said there was a "confirmed link"between AQIM and Boko Haram.

    "We will ... conduct joint patrols along our borders, prosecute criminals, control traveldocuments," he said on cooperation efforts.

    Security has deteriorated across the hard-to-patrol Sahel desert strip in recent months.

    AQIM is currently holding nine European hostages, while a new splinter group callingitself the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa claims to hold two Spaniardsand an Italian kidnapped in Algeria in October.

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    Mali is also facing an offensive by Tuareg rebels who returned heavily armed fromfighting for fallen Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi.

    Boko Haram -- believed to have a number of factions with differing aims, including somewith political links and a hardcore Islamist cell -- has carried out a wave of deadly attacks

    in Nigeria.

    ###

    THE WORLD; International court indicts Kenyans; The charges stem from the

    postelection violence that racked the country in 2007 (LA Times)

    http://search.proquest.com.ezproxy6.ndu.edu/docview/917276718/13476894C706BE0B34/17?accountid=12686January 24, 2012By Robyn Dixon

    The International Criminal Court ordered four powerful politicians in Kenya to stand trialfor crimes against humanity, a rare legal challenge to an elite that has long enjoyedimpunity in the East African nation.

    Two potential candidates in next year's presidential election, Deputy Prime MinisterUhuru Kenyatta and former Higher Education Minister William Ruto, were among thoseindicted for the political violence that racked the country after the 2007 presidential race.The charges include murder and forcible removal of people from their homes.

    Cabinet Secretary Francis Muthaura and radio presenter Joshua Arap Sang face similarcharges.

    Kenyatta, a close ally of President Mwai Kibaki, is a member of one of Kenya's mostinfluential political dynasties and the son of the country's first president, Jomo Kenyatta.

    He is accused of hiring members of Kenya's biggest criminal gang, the Mungiki, to killand rape supporters of Raila Odinga, a 2007 presidential candidate who is now primeminister.

    Ruto is accused of masterminding attacks on supporters of Kibaki, who defeated Odingain the widely disputed balloting.

    Ruto said Monday that he would stand for election regardless of the charges.

    The trials threaten to unleash new tension between members of the Kenyan tribes whosemembers massacred one another after the 2007 election.

    The international court has charged two men from either side in the conflict. Kenyattaand Muthaura, who is also an ally of Kibaki, will be tried together. A separate trial willbe held for Ruto and Sang, both Odinga supporters.

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    Odinga became prime minister in an uneasy power-sharing deal brokered by the UnitedNations after the postelection turmoil.

    An estimated 1,500 people died in the ethnic violence that erupted after Odinga accused

    Kibaki, the incumbent, of stealing the election. About 300,000 people fled their homes,some never to return. The troubled Rift Valley was hardest hit by massacres.

    Luis Moreno-Ocampo, prosecutor for the Hague-based International Criminal Court,contends that the violence was orchestrated by Kenya's political elite.

    After the ICC announcement Monday, Kibaki appealed for calm and ordered Kenya'sattorney general to study the judgment and advise on the way forward.

    ###

    Darfur: Security Council condemns attack on UN-African Union peacekeepers(M2 Presswire)

    http://search.proquest.com.ezproxy6.ndu.edu/docview/917283718/13476894C706BE0B34/44?accountid=12686January 24, 2012.By an unattributed author

    The Security Council today strongly condemned this weekend's attack on a UnitedNations-African Union patrol in Darfur, which resulted in one death, and called on theSudanese Government to bring the perpetrators to justice.

    One Nigerian peacekeeper serving with the mission, known as UNAMID, was killed inSaturday's attack and three others were wounded, one of them seriously.

    "The members of the Security Council expressed their condolences to the family of thepeacekeeper killed in the attack, as well as to the Government of Nigeria," AmbassadorBaso Sangqu of South Africa, which holds the 15-member body's presidency for thismonth, said in a statement read out to the press.

    "They called on the Government of Sudan to bring the perpetrators to justice, andstressed that there must be an end to impunity for those who attack peacekeepers," headded.

    Council members also reiterated their full support for UNAMID and called on all partiesin Darfur to cooperate with the mission.Fighting and large-scale displacement hasconvulsed Darfur since 2003, when rebels took up arms against the Government, whosemilitary forces responded with the support of allied militiamen.Deployed at the start of2008, UNAMID is tasked with protecting civilians, promoting an inclusive peace processand help ensuring the safe delivery of humanitarian assistance across Darfur, an aridregion on Sudan's western flank.

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    Nigerians arrest Islamist militant suspects, sources say (CNN)

    http://edition.cnn.com/2012/01/24/world/africa/nigeria-attacks/index.html?hpt=hp_t2

    January 24, 2012By Nima Elbagir,

    Lagos, Nigeria (CNN) -- A joint military task force in Nigeria arrested 158 suspectedmembers of the Islamist militant group Boko Haram, security sources told CNN Tuesday,three days after a spate of bombings and shootings left more than 200 people dead inNigeria's second-largest city.

    Some suspects resisted arrest and exchanged gunfire with the task force in the city ofKano, said security sources who asked not to be named because they are not authorized tospeak to the media.

    No casualties have been reported so far, they said.

    The arrests come as community leaders said the number of dead from the Kano bombingand gun attacks has risen to at least 211.

    Community leaders have been keeping their own count of the number of dead fromFriday's attacks, they told CNN Tuesday, including victims who never made it tohospitals. They declined to be quoted by name for security reasons.

    Government officials declined to confirm the number of victims. They previously put thedeath toll at 157.

    Police in Kano announced Tuesday that they had seized 10 cars laden with explosivesand about 300 improvised explosive devices hidden in soft drink cans and bottles at anumber of locations in the city.

    The state police commissioner, Ibrahim Idris, said a mass search turned up the explosivesafter police found undetonated devices at a police barracks in Kano.

    President Goodluck Jonathan toured the city Sunday after the attacks there left the policeheadquarters and other government buildings in charred ruins Friday night.

    "The message I had for the people of Kano is the same message I have for all Nigerians:A terrorist attack on one person is an attack on all of us," Jonathan said in a post on hisofficial Facebook page after the visit.

    Boko Haram -- whose name means "western education is sacrilege" -- claimedresponsibility for the blast in a phone call to the Daily Trust, according to journalists atthe newspaper.

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    The group has been blamed for months of widespread bloodshed, with churches andpolice stations among the targets.

    The United States Tuesday strongly condemned the "terrorist attacks" carried out in Kano

    on Friday and in the neighboring state of Bauchi on Sunday, State Departmentrepresentative Victoria Nuland said.

    "This is a time for all Nigerians to stand united against the enemies of civility and peace,"she said in a written statement.

    "Nigeria's ethnic and religious diversity is a source of strength for the country and thosewho seek to undermine that strength with divisive tactics cannot succeed," she insisted.

    The bombings hit eight government sites Friday.

    Shell-shocked residents wandered the streets, looking for loved ones. Others hid behindbarricaded doors, too scared to leave for fear of more attacks.

    "That's the scary part, not knowing," said Faruk Mohammed, 27, who lives near one ofthe bombed police stations. "We don't know what's going to happen next. No one thoughtthis would ever happen here. There's a general sense of despair."

    The attacks paired bomb blasts with shootings at various sites including police stations,the passport office, state security headquarters and the immigration office.

    During the attack, assailants entered a police station, freed detainees and bombed it,authorities said.

    They later canvassed the area in a car led by motorcycles, spraying targets with gunfire.

    "I counted at least 25 explosions," Mohammed said. "... Then it went deathly quiet. Kanois a bustling city. ... I've lived here for years and it has never been quiet, even at night.But after the bombings stopped, the only noise you could hear were dogs barking."

    On Sunday, two churches and a security checkpoint were attacked in Bauchi state, thestate police commissioner said in a written release. At least 11 people, including policeand army personnel, were killed in the checkpoint attack, the commissioner said. Therewere no casualties reported from the church attacks.

    Police said they suspect Boko Haram was involved in the checkpoint attack.

    In December, Jonathan declared a state of emergency in four northern states after a seriesof Christmas Day attacks on churches blamed on Boko Haram.

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    The man suspected of orchestrating those attacks was briefly captured before escapingpolice custody while being transferred to another prison.

    Depending on the faction, Boko Haram's ambitions range from the stricter enforcementof their interpretation of Islamic Sharia law to the total destruction of the government.

    Its grievances remain local, but it has attacked international institutions --- such as theUnited Nations -- on Nigerian soil.

    An August 26 attack -- during which a Boko Haram suicide bomber drove a Jeep ladenwith explosives into the U.N. headquarters in Abuja -- was one of the deadliest in theworld body's history. Twenty-four people were killed, including 12 U.N. staff members.

    The group was formed in 2002 by Islamic preacher Mohammad Yusuf as an outgrowth ofethnic tensions in the country in the 1990s.

    Nigeria's population is split between mostly Muslims living in the north andpredominantly Christians in the south. Yusuf advocated the institution of Sharia lawthroughout the northern states and opposed democracy.

    The group operated openly out of northeastern Nigeria and staged small-scale attacksagainst government targets.

    In 2009, Nigerian police forces moved to crack down on Boko Haram. Harsh policetactics led to an armed uprising and the arrest of Yusuf, who later died in police custody.

    The death spurred the group to begin its attacks on police stations. Ensuing clashesbetween group members and the police killed hundreds.

    The following year, Boko Haram re-emerged as a more radicalized, insurgent-stylegroup, staging assassinations and attacks against not only government targets, but alsochurches and even a beer garden.

    "We're dealing with a movement of inchoate rage," said John Campbell, a U.S.ambassador to Nigeria who left his post in 2007.

    "It's highly decentralized, but what it has in common is a strongly Islamic character, andhatred for the secular, political economy of Nigeria, particularly the federal and stategovernments," he said.

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    END REPORT